ABUSE TRACKER

A digest of links to media coverage of clergy abuse. For recent coverage listed in this blog, read the full article in the newspaper or other media source by clicking “Read original article.” For earlier coverage, click the title to read the original article.

February 19, 2016

Pell’s abuse allegations ‘utterly false’

AUSTRALIA
9 News

Cardinal George Pell is facing a fresh round of allegations he molested minors while he was the Archbishop of Melbourne, after a Victorian newspaper reported he has been under investigation.

The Herald Sun claims that Victoria Police possesses a collection of documents alleging the cardinal has committed “multiple offences” while he was a priest in Ballarat and also the Archbishop of Melbourne.

Cardinal Pell began work as a priest in Ballarat after being ordained in 1966 and was Archbishop of Melbourne from 1996 to 2001.

A statement issued by the Catholic Church has called the allegations “without foundation and utterly false”, and says they were leaked at a time “clearly designed to do maximum damage to the Cardinal and the Catholic Church”.

It calls for those in the police who leaked confidential information to face a public inquiry.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Australian cardinal dismisses abuse allegations

ROME
RTE News

The Vatican’s finance controller, Cardinal George Pell, has dismissed accusations he sexually abused boys during his time as a priest which are reportedly being investigated by Australian police.

A statement issued by the cardinal’s office in Rome said: “The allegations are without foundation and utterly false”.

The Melbourne-based Herald Sun newspaper has reported that a police taskforce in the state of Victoria have been investigating Cardinal Pell for the last year over allegations that he abused between five and ten boys.

Details of the inquiry emerged a week before he is due to give evidence by video link to an Australian inquiry into abuse by priests in the town of Ballarat, near Melbourne.

The 74-year-old Prefect of the Secretariat for the Economy of the Holy See has been criticised for saying he is too ill to make the journey home to testify in person over alleged cover-ups during his time as the head of Australia’s Catholic hierarchy.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Destituye la Iglesia a sacerdote por abuso sexual en QR

MéRIDA (MEXICO)
La Jornada Baja California [Mexico City, Mexico]

February 19, 2016

By Patricia Vazquez

Read original article

El sacerdote Heriberto Monroy Camiruaga, fundador del movimiento Misioneros Eucarísticos Marianos bajo el Signo de la Cruz (MECM), es señalado de abuso sexual infantil, por instrucciones de la Santa Sede fue expulsado de la iglesia clerical, su movimiento no podrá continuar en Quintana Roo, informó el Obispo de la prelatura Cancún-Chetumal, Monseñor Pedro Pablo Elizondo. Recordó las palabras del Papa “no tengan miedo a la transparencia de la iglesia”.

A su llegada a Cancún luego de acompañar al Papa Francisco en la visita que tuvo por diversas entidades del país, el religioso informó que la Santa Sede giró instrucciones de su expulsión de la iglesia católica, de lo cual ya fue notificado por la Arquidiócesis Primada de México por lo que los otros tres sacerdotes que integraban el MECM, y oficiaban misa en la Parroquia de la Santa Cruz y San José, en Cancún, podrán continuar en la prelatura pero solamente como padres diocesanos.

Las 12 religiosas integrantes de la comunidad que igual prestaban sus servicios en ese movimiento deberán integrarse a otro movimiento o buscar la aprobación de la diócesis.

Monseñor aclaró que Monroy Camiruaga fue denunciado en el estado de México, pues en Cancún nunca prestó sus servicios como sacerdote.

Pedro Pablo indicó que en su momento los religiosos solicitaron su reconocimiento como congregación o movimiento pero no reunieron el carisma, por lo que se le negó.

Evocó las palabras del Sumo Pontífice quien no va por las multitudes, sino por el individuo.

Monroy Camiruaga fundó la agrupación en Tlalneplantla, estado de México, de donde fue expulsado por la Santa Sede hace dos años bajo cargos de abuso a menores, cuando migró a Cancún, Quintana Roo.

El Obispo reconoció que conocía el caso de Heriberto Monroy pero los sacerdotes pidieron quedarse en Cancún porque no tuvieron ningún problema legal, e incluso, anticiparon que apelarían la revocación de la Santa Sede, pero a dos años no tienen avances.

La agrupación estaba conformada por un sacerdote, dos vicarios y 12 monjas.

Al cuestionarlo por Los Legionarios de Cristo, orden a la cual pertenece y en donde también hubo denuncias de abuso sexual, afirmó que Benedicto XVI, hoy Papa Emérito, analizó la congregación y vio que había una gran escuela junto con un trabajo impecable.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Destituye la Iglesia a sacerdote por abuso sexual en QR

MEXICO
La Jornada

[Cancun, Quintana Roo. The priest Heriberto Monroy Camiruaga, founder of the Missionaries Eucharistic Marian movement under the Sign of the Cross (MECM), has been singled out for child sexual abuse and on instructions from the Holy See was dismissed from the church. This movement is not allowed to continue in Quintana Roo, according to Bishop Pedro Pablo Elizonda of Cancún-Chetumal prelature. He recalled the words of Pope Francis who called for transparency in the church.]

Por Patricia Vázquez, corresponsal

Cancún, Quintana Roo. El sacerdote Heriberto Monroy Camiruaga, fundador del movimiento Misioneros Eucarísticos Marianos bajo el Signo de la Cruz (MECM), es señalado de abuso sexual infantil, por instrucciones de la Santa Sede fue expulsado de la iglesia clerical, su movimiento no podrá continuar en Quintana Roo, informó el Obispo de la prelatura Cancún-Chetumal, Monseñor Pedro Pablo Elizondo. Recordó las palabras del Papa “no tengan miedo a la transparencia de la iglesia”.

A su llegada a Cancún luego de acompañar al Papa Francisco en la visita que tuvo por diversas entidades del país, el religioso informó que la Santa Sede giró instrucciones de su expulsión de la iglesia católica, de lo cual ya fue notificado por la Arquidiócesis Primada de México por lo que los otros tres sacerdotes que integraban el MECM, y oficiaban misa en la Parroquia de la Santa Cruz y San José, en Cancún, podrán continuar en la prelatura pero solamente como padres diocesanos.

Las 12 religiosas integrantes de la comunidad que igual prestaban sus servicios en ese movimiento deberán integrarse a otro movimiento o buscar la aprobación de la diócesis.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Ex-Melbourne teacher too ‘panicked’ to deal with sex abuse claims

ISRAEL/AUSTRALIA
The Australian

Jamie Walker
Middle East Correspondent

If she holds true to form, Malka Leifer will have checked herself into hospital by the time her potentially make-or-break day in court comes around tomorrow in Jerusalem.

The former principal of an ultra-Orthodox Jewish school in Melbourne has been ducking hearings over her extradition to Australia for 18 months, claiming she is too panic-stricken to show up, forcing adjournment after adjournment.

Leifer is wanted in Australia on 74 criminal counts of alleged child sexual abuse of her former female students; the Israeli authorities want her on a plane; and her alleged victims from the Adass Israel School in Melbourne’s leafy inner southeast want to have their day in court.

Yet an Israeli judge has so far accepted her lawyers’ argument that she lapses into a psychotic state ahead of each court date, rendering her unfit to appear or even communicate with them.

A stout, kindly looking woman, last photographed with her thick hair cut short, Leifer ingratiated herself with the most conservative of Melbourne’s religiously observant Jewish families after being recruited from Israel.

She allegedly breached that trust by preying on the unworldly girls placed in her care.

Her husband, Jacob Leifer, is a rabbi who keeps a low profile but stands resolutely by his wife and mother of their eight children. Malka Leifer is little known beyond the close-knit Haredi circle in which they move in the Orthodox enclave of Bnei Brak in central Israel. An insular community has closed ranks behind them.

Her defence appears to be well funded, involving two law firms, each with defined areas of specialisation. Speculation abounds about who is paying for what, but no one really knows beyond the Leifers and their lawyers. No one will speak publicly.

The situation would be farcical were the pain not so acute — both for the young women who say their lives were blighted by what Leifer allegedly did to them, and for the fugitive woman who lives under house arrest in Israel as the legal bickering grinds on.

The case has also put the Israeli justice system on trial in the court of international public opinion. Leifer’s critics accuse her lawyers of exploiting legal loopholes to avoid extradition, seeking to drag out the case for so long that it becomes impractical to run, instead of trying to get it dismissed by judge Amnon Cohen.

“This is critical for Israel,” says Manny Waks, a 39-year-old survivor of sex abuse at another Orthodox Jewish school in Melbourne who is rebuilding his life near Tel Aviv. “Many individuals and communities around the world are looking at this case … it will certainly either increase or reduce confidence in the Israeli justice system.

“It will also have implications in terms of how people view Israel as a state of the Jewish people, because if this country is seen to become a refuge it will be very off-putting, to say the least.”

Privately, Israeli prosecutors are deeply critical of the stalling and, by implication, the judge’s willingness to entertain a defence tactic that Leifer is perfectly entitled to pursue under law.

At the last hearing in early January — ahead of which Leifer checked herself into a clinic, sidestepping the latest summons to appear — Cohen suggested he might order a stay of the proceedings until there was a change in her mental state.

The State Attorney, advancing the case for extradition, has argued the judge need not go into whether or not Leifer is fit to stand trial. That would be a matter for an Australian court to decide post-extradition. The issue before the Jerusalem District Court is a relatively straightforward matter of dealing with her ability to travel to Melbourne, prosecutors have said in submissions.

The problem for the State Attorney is that Israeli law requires a defendant to be present at all proceedings and to be capable of interacting with defence counsel. Cohen has evidently put weight on independent assessments by a state psychiatrist that Leifer’s purportedly paralysing panic attacks are genuine and that alternatives, such as linking to her by video or even convening a hearing at her home in Bnei Brak would not fly.

Still, the way in which Leifer has conducted herself does smack of contrivance.

Typically, she goes into the local hospital or to a private clinic a day or two ahead of any court appearance. Once an adjournment is secured, she signs herself out.

This has been the pattern since she was arrested in Israel in August 2014 in response to an extradition request from the Australian government and, for a time, held in custody.

In fact, she has not set foot in court since the early proceedings involving her arrest and subsequent release into home detention. Her life is far from easy, however. Leifer is allowed out for only an hour a day and must wear an electronic tracker. A person approved by the court has to be with her round the clock.

Waks agrees the situation can’t go on for much longer. “From my perspective, I genuinely hope the judge will say, ‘enough of this nonsense’,” he tells Inquirer.

Expectations are building that tomorrow’s hearing will be decisive one way or the other — although it is entirely Cohen’s call.

Israeli judges are as ferociously independent as their counterparts in Australia; if there is a lesson from this saga it’s that the course of justice can take its stately time in Israel.

Leifer fled Melbourne in March 2008, eight years after she was headhunted from Israel to be headmistress at the strictly religious Adass school.

The school board got her on a plane with several of her children within hours of standing her down over the sexual abuse allegations. She was subsequently joined by her husband, who had been with her in Melbourne.

In awarding civil damages of $1.27 million last September to one of Leifer’s former students, now a woman of 28, Victorian Supreme Court judge Jack Rush found the school board had been aware, at the time she was sent packing in “extraordinary” circumstances, that up to 10 girls had claimed to have been molested by Leifer.

The Victorian police were kept in the dark about what had allegedly gone on. “The sexual misconduct of Leifer detailed by the plaintiff is disturbing,” Rush said in his scathing judgment. The woman concerned had been 15 when the abuse began in 2003.

Leifer had managed to “charm everyone very quickly’’, the Melbourne judge recounted, and was viewed by the girl as “completely trustworthy” when she went to her about problems she was having at home.

Rush said in his judgment: “In accordance with the religious beliefs and practices of the Adass community, the plaintiff and her siblings were bought up in a home with no access to television, radio, internet, magazines or newspapers; not even a sales catalogue entered the home.

“Children were raised not having knowledge of world events and were completely isolated from anything beyond the community they were within.”

The alleged victim told the court: “We weren’t to know that a relationship could exist between a female and a male.”

The Adass school, which had about 500 children enrolled in gender-segregated campuses, was a religious institution above all else. At the time, the girls’ school did not offer Year 12 because female students were expected to become housewives rather than go to university or to work.

The woman described how initially reassuring touches and hugs soon turned into exploitative sex as Leifer took to “sucking her breasts and penetrating her vagina”, according to Rush’s judgment. The woman’s older sister was also molested by Leifer, he found.

“I felt very special, I felt privileged, I felt worthy,” the woman said in her evidence, looking back on how she was allegedly manipulated by Leifer.

“Because the community is the school and the school is the community … the whole community looked up to her and basically­ ­idolised her, she was seen as someone who was holier than holy.”

While the outcry in Australia has been intense, Leifer’s arrest and battle against extradition barely rated a mention in the Israeli media until the story was recently picked up by Reshet Bet, the country’s main news radio station.

A half-hour expose lifted the lid on what was widely seen as “an almost closed case”, says journalist and presenter Chico Menashe.

The allegations swirling around Leifer also had uncomfortable parallels with the case of pedophile Jewish studies teacher Todros Grynhaus, who attacked two teenage girls in Britain before using a false passport to escape to Israel.

After an 11-month extradition battle and trial in Britain, he was jailed last July for 13 years.

Menashe backs Waks’s assessment that the Leifer case is damaging to their country’s reputation, though he stresses that to his knowledge the Israeli authorities are doing their best to sort out the “procedural loop” in the Jerusalem court.

“I do have some tough questions to the judge who is dealing with this case,” Menashe says. “I think he might have dealt differently and better in order to solve the situation.”

Elizabeth Levy of the Israel National Council for the Child, which pursues children’s rights and welfare, says she shares the frustration of Leifer’s alleged victims. “Intolerable” is her verdict on the delays.

However, there are signs that the campaign for the disgraced principal to face her accusers in Australia is gaining traction.

The Magen child protection agency will be picketing outside the Jerusalem District Court tomorrow in support of Leifer’s extradition to Australia. “I think that the state of Israel should never be used as a safe haven for sex offenders,” says its executive director, Miriam Friedman.

Waks will be there, too. The Australian embassy will have an officer on hand to keep tabs on the proceedings — assuming an anticipated application by Leifer’s lawyers to close the court fails, or there is no last-minute hitch.

Australia’s ambassador to Israel, Dave Sharma, tells Inquirer: “I can confirm that Australia has made an extradition request to Israel for Ms Malka Leifer, who is wanted in Australia to face prosecution for 74 sexual assault offences allegedly committed while she was employed in senior roles at an Orthodox Jewish school in Melbourne. As the matter remains before the court in Israel, it is the Australian government’s position that it would not be appropriate to comment further.”

Waks says he is in touch with some of Leifer’s alleged victims, who live in Australia, the US and Israel. Last month he posted on his blog a plaintive statement from one of them. “It has been 18 months since Malka Leifer was arrested,” the young woman said. “Where is justice? Where is the court system that is on the victim’s side? Where is Malka Leifer?

“Why is she allowed to hide behind her supposed panic attacks? Is rape not considered crime enough to be trialled? …

“I cannot go on much longer, life revolves around the closure a trial will provide.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

If the Pope is so keen on tearing down walls, he could start with the wall of silence that’s protected pervert priests for decades

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By KATIE HOPKINS FOR MAILONLINE

Your mother probably told you—mine told me—that you should never talk about religion or politics in polite company.

Fortunately most of the company I keep is not very polite.

But I happen to like it when people speak their mind. I believe this world would be a far safer place if we all said exactly what we thought and were not cowed by consequences, silenced by the strong arm of the law or the madness of the mob on twitter.

There are a few exceptions.

If you are given a platform by your job, have the decency to stick to your specialist subject. …

Watching tears stream down my husband’s face at the end of the movie ‘Spotlight’, as the staggering number of pedophile priests in Boston rolled across the screen, I see how strongly some people feel about the God in whom they believe.

The Catholic Church has built walls around these snivelling excuses for men. Cardinal Pell and his bottom-dwelling kind, with their fancy outfits hiding the fact they are not true men of the cloth have built their own walls. Walls of silence.

But this does not mean I am disrespectful of believers.

Who can blame them if it brings hope or purpose? Maybe Saint Peter does exist and won’t let me in, like Paul McCartney at Tyga’s Grammy party.

Come to think of it, I have been out with five Mark’s in my life and not one Peter. My father even started addressing them as such. ‘Evening Mark Three.’

But if you are a believer, then you may be seething His Royal Popey-ness has entered the presidential debate, saying Donald Trump is not a Christian because he wants to build a big wall to keep Mexican immigrants out of the US.

‘A person who thinks only about building walls… and not of building bridges, is not Christian.’
OK, Pope. I wouldn’t normally, but you cast the first stone, so I’m chucking in a few hand grenades of my own.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Australian Cardinal George Pell denies abusing children

VATICAN CITY
7 News

February 20, 2016

Vatican City (AFP) – Vatican finance chief George Pell on Friday dismissed as baseless accusations that he had abused children during his time as a priest which are reportedly being investigated by Australian police.

“The allegations are without foundation and utterly false,” a statement issued by Pell’s office in Rome said after the Sydney-based Herald Sun newspaper reported that police in the state of Victoria have been investigating Pell for the last year over the accusations.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

The Pope’s mid-air press conference will understandably anger abuse victims

UNITED KINGDOM
Catholic Herald

by Edward Condon posted Friday, 19 Feb 2016

The Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors will feel even more frustrated following the Pope’s comments yesterday

The papal mid-air press conference has become an almost clichéd source of tension ever since Francis first grabbed a microphone at the back of a plane and started fielding questions.

These impromptu sessions have given us some of the most unguarded, most quoted, least prepared, sound bites of his pontificate. Yesterday was no exception, with the Pope taking the unprecedented step of calling out an individual politician for a specific policy. In much the same way that “Who am I to judge?” has become, in the public mind, the Franciscan policy on sexual mores, by calling Donald Trump “not a Christian” because of his immigration policy, Pope Francis has now made, whether he meant to or not, immigration the defining policy issue of his pontificate. …

I have written before that there remains a real obstacle of understanding to the Church, as a hierarchy and institution, fully processing the lessons of the child sex abuse crisis and making the changes, legal and cultural, necessary to prevent such abominations in the future. Pope Francis, like many in the Curia, showed he is both aware of and engaged with the technical process of reform, highlighting in his answers the tireless, and largely unacknowledged, work for Cardinal Ratzinger and later Pope Benedict, and his own recent structural reforms of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and the establishment of the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors.

Unfortunately, while he showed a decent engagement with the reform of the process for handling individual cases against individual clerics, when the Pope spoke about the case of a bishop who moves a priest whom they know or suspect of being a peadophile, the Pope called them, depending on your translation, either “irresponsible” or “reckless” and that the best thing they could do was present their resignation. Language like this will, rightly, enrage the victims of clerical sexual abuse, and it is a very sad illustration of the the Vatican’s often tone-deaf approach to dealing with these issues.

According the the reforms made by Pope Benedict, and Francis himself, such bishops are not “irresponsible”, they are criminally negligent; emphasis on the “criminally”. The best thing for them to do is not submit their resignations and be allowed to quietly disappear into retirement, but for them to be formally charged before the new tribunal at the CDF, erected by Francis, competent to hear abuse of office cases against bishops, and then be publicly deprived of their office.

Of course the victims of clerical abuse want change. And of course they want the bishops whose conduct allowed individual predictors to become systematic abusers to be removed. But by simply letting such bishops resign, the victims, and the whole public society of the Church, are denied the public vindication of justice which is essential to the process of healing and reform.

Child sexual abuse is the most vile of sins, and it is evil, as Pope Francis said. So too are the actions of those bishops who facilitate their crimes, sometimes over a period of years. The Church’s ultimate response to sin is always to announce the love and mercy of God, and this is no less the case with those who commit the most serious of sins. But these sins are also crimes, crimes which the Church has a legal and moral obligation to punish, and punish publicly, to redress the damage done the community and to justice.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Pope becomes more lenient on bishops over child abuse, again

UNITED KINGDOM
National Secular Society

Posted: Fri, 19 Feb 2016

The National Secular Society has strongly criticised Pope Francis’ call for bishops who moved paedophile priests between parishes to resign and warned that this does not go nearly far enough.

According to the Associated Press, Pope Francis said aboard the papal plane back from Mexico that “any bishop who moves a suspected paedophile priest from parish to parish should resign”.

He reportedly referred to child rape as “pederasty” and said that a bishop who “changes parish” for a priest when he “detects pederasty is reckless and the best thing he can do is present his resignation.”

The National Secular Society has exhaustively studied the failure of the RC Church to deal adequately with child rape and other abuse in its ranks, including bringing the matter to the attention of the United Nations. The Society’s Executive Director, Keith Porteous Wood commented said that guilty bishops should face justice, and not just be told to resign as the Pope suggests.

“The Pope wants to leave it to bishops to resign of their own free choice, rather than forcing them to leave. The decision should not be in the hands of the individual bishop; few will resign of their own free will.

“Last year the Pope was taking a tougher line, he announced a Tribunal to judge such bishops. But even the Tribunal was unsatisfactory; it served only to provide a legitimate disciplinary mechanism for such bishops. Its ultimate punishment was derisory – defrocking. Instead, the Church should have required that such bishops be reported to prosecuting authorities and face imprisonment if convicted, some bishops in the United States have already been convicted.”

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Rome–Victim of just-restored convicted perp priest blasts Francis

MINNESOTA
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Friday, February 19

Statement by Megan Peterson, abused by Fr. Jeyapaul in MN, survivor19@live.com, 218 684 0073

Yesterday, Pope Francis added insult to injury when he said a bishop who transfers a predator should resign and asked “Is that clear?” Just days ago, the Vatican lifted the suspension of my perpetrator, even though he was pled guilty to child sex crimes. So, no, Francis, you are NOT clear. Your words do not match your actions.

[Pioneer Press]

And let me be clear: Just this past week, Catholic officials decided to put the priest who raped me back into ministry. A bishop referred his case to the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and the office lifted his suspension from church office. Now Joseph Jeyapaul will be assigned to a parish somewhere.

It has left me feeling abused and degraded. The Vatican’s decision and the Pope’s recent comments reopens wounds that have barely begun to heal; it tells me and other survivors that our suffering matters nothing to them. It’s hard for me to separate the cruel assertion of power and authority that my rapist used on me from the cruel assertion of institutional power and authority that can put a rapist back into ministry. They both show complete disregard for the humanity and wellbeing of others.

I hope actions, like Jeyapaul’s reinstatement and the Vatican’s announcement earlier this month that new bishops have no obligation to report sexual violence by clergy to civil authorities, will speak louder than the pope’s rhetoric about this crisis.

We know the problem of sexual violence in the church is systemic, and we know that the culture of impunity within this institution is what perpetuates it. How many more lives have to be ruined before real changes, like mandatory reporting and removing confessed abusers are instituted? How much more evidence is needed before those whose duty it is to protect us finally act on the fact that the Vatican cannot be left to police itself on this issue?

I have literally spent my entire adult life fighting to ensure that other children in the church won’t have to experience what I and so many other survivors have been through. Placing Joseph Jeyapaul, back into ministry is not only a catastrophic misuse of power but a grave injustice to myself, the other victim, and the future victims. Even though he has not been placed back into ministry yet, The Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and the Bishop in India’s, decision alone has already started to victimize people and ensure future victimization. The decision alone, has already targeted, affected, and victimized me.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Changes at the Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis

MINNESOTA
Canonical Consultation

[with copy for the memo from the archdiocese]

02/18/2016

While there is still no news about the appointment of a new Archbishop, other changes have been quietly taking place at the Archdiocese. In an email to priests yesterday the Chancery announced several staff changes (see below). In addition, there are rumors that the Archdiocese is planning to move its Central Corporation to a building on the old 3M manufacturing site on Saint Paul’s East Side. Perhaps most importantly, the criminal charges are still pending, and the first review of the civil settlement should soon be added to the court schedule. It is certain to be an interesting Lent and spring.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Denuncian a sacerdote católico por violencia intrafamiliar

MEXICO
Pagina 3

Por Paulina Ríos Olivera – 18 febrero, 2016

OAXACA, (página3.mx).- El sacerdote católico Manuel Arias Montes, quien destapó el caso de su homólogo Gerardo Silvestre Hernández, acusado de haber cometido abuso sexual en contra de más de 100 niños indígenas de Oaxaca, fue exhibido públicamente al darse a conocer que ha cometido violencia intrafamiliar.

En conferencia de prensa, el abogado postulante Alejandro Noyola expuso que da a conocerlo, porque ahora Arias Montes quiere desvirtuar la denuncia e incumplir con sus obligaciones como padre, diciendo que es objeto de una venganza por denunciar el caso de pederastia.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Víctima reprocha “hipocresía” del Papa con los abusos del clero mexicano

MEXICO
Univision

[A victim of clergy abuse accused the pope of hypocrisy in dealing with abuse in Mexico. He said it was said the pope refused to meet with survivors.]

Jorge Cancino publicado: feb 18, 2016 2:31 PM
@cancino_jorge

Una víctima de abusos por parte del clero mexicano dijo el jueves que la negativa del Papa a reunirse con ellos durante su peregrinaje que finalizó el miércoles en Ciudad Juárez, “es verdaderamente triste”, y señaló que muchos “teníamos la esperanza de que nos iba a recibir tal como lo hizo en Estados Unidos”.

En declaraciones a Univision Noticias, Jesús Romero Colín, un ex monaguillo que fue violado por un sacerdote cuando tenía 11 años y hasta los 17, expresó que “en verdad teníamos las ganas que creer que esta situación (de los abusos y una respuesta por parte del Vaticano) podía cambiar, pero el silencio (de Francisco) corrobora que no es así”.

El caso Romero se volvió viral en 2007 cuando la periodista y escritora Sanjuana Martínez publicó el libro “Manto púrpura y prueba de fe: la red de cardenales y obispos en la pederastia clerical”, obra que denunció las violaciones cometidas por el presbítero Carlos López Valdés, quien el 25 de febrero de 2011 fue sancionado por la Congregación para la Doctrina de la Fe (ex Santo Oficio) con la dimisión de su estado clerical. El dictamen fue inapelable.

Note: This is an Abuse Tracker excerpt. Click the title to view the full text of the original article. If the original article is no longer available, see our News Archive.

Lyon : le cardinal Barbarin poussé à la démission ?

FRANCE
euronews

[Lyon: Cardinal Barbarin forced to resign?]

Le Diocèse de Lyon embarrassé par un scandale de pédophilie.

Les victimes présumées d’un prêtre pédophile sortent de l’ombre, et demandent des comptes aux plus hautes autorités de l’Eglise catholique en France.

Objets d’abus sexuels présumés du père Bernard Preynat, dans une période allant des années 1970 à 1991, plusieurs anciens scouts ont décidé de porter plainte contre le prêtre, placé sous contrôle judiciaire en janvier dernier.

Ils reprochent au Diocèse de Lyon d’avoir maintenu le père Preynat en poste, et au contact d’enfants, dans plusieurs paroisses de la région lyonnaise, jusqu’en août 2015, en toute connaissance de cause.

Plusieurs des victimes présumées ont annoncé leur intention de porter plainte contre le cardinal Barbarin, pour “non dénonciation de faits d’agression sexuelle”.

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Fliegende Pressekonferenz: Migranten, Missbrauch, Donald Trump

Radio Vatikan

Wiederverheiratete Geschiedene, Donald Trumps Bemerkungen über Papst Franziskus, pädophile Täter, Russland und die Ukraine – all diese konfliktreichen Themen fanden sich in der Pressekonferenz wieder, die Papst Franziskus während des Rückfluges aus Mexiko für die mitreisenden Journalisten hab. Hier eine ausführliche Zusammenfassung. …

Pädophilie und Marcial Maciel

Viel Schmerz habe in Mexiko die sexuelle Gewalt gegen Kinder verursacht, sagte ein weiterer Journalist und ging auf den Fall Marcial Maciel Degollado ein, also auf den Gründer der „Legionäre Christi“, der Mexikaner war. Die Opfer fühlten sich immer noch nicht von der Kirche geschützt; ob er daran gedacht habe, diese Menschen zu treffen, wollte der Journalist wissen. Und als Anschlussfrage: Wie er darüber denke, dass Priester, die zu Tätern geworden seien, von ihren Vorgesetzten oft einfach nur in eine andere Pfarrei versetzt worden seien.

„Ein Bischof, der einen Priester aus einer Pfarrei versetzt, wenn dieser als Pädophiler bekannt ist, handelt verantwortungslos, und das Beste, was er tun kann, ist seinen Rücktritt einzureichen!“ Klare Worte des Papstes. „Ist das klar genug? Und was den Fall Maciel angeht: Hier erlaube ich mir den Mann zu loben, der in Zeiten, in denen er nicht die Kraft hatte, sich durchzusetzen, gekämpft hat, obgleich er sich nicht sofort hat durchsetzen können: Kardinal Ratzinger“ [der Papst bittet um Applaus]. Als Präfekt der Glaubenskongregation habe dieser alle Informationen gesammelt, aber nicht gegen Maciel vorgehen können. Um die Papstwahl 2005 herum habe Ratzinger das dann angesprochen und als Papst auch angegangen, daran wolle er an dieser Stelle erinnern, so Franziskus.

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Gab es ein System?

DEUTSCHLAND
Tag Des Herrn

[Was there a system? Next Thursday the feature film “Spotlight” opens in the German cinemas. It is about the revelations of the abuse scandal in the US church and the question: “Was there a system?” A comment by Hubertus Buker.]

Am nächsten Donnerstag läuft der Spielfilm “Spotlight” in den deutschen Kinos an. Er handelt von der Enthüllung des Missbrauchskandals in der US-Kirche und der Frage: “Gab es ein System?”. Ein Kommentar von Hubertus Büker.

Der zentrale Satz im US-Spielfilm „Spotlight“, der jetzt in unsere Kinos kommt, lautet: „Zeigt mir das System!“ Den Satz sagt der Chef des „Boston Globe“, nachdem seine Reporter herausgefunden haben: Es gab im Erzbistum Boston 90 katholische Priester, die Kinder sexuell missbraucht haben. Dem Chef erscheint die bloße Zahl zweitrangig. Er will wissen: Wieso blieben die Täter unbehelligt? Wurden ihre Taten planmäßig unter den Teppich gekehrt?

Ja. Die Kirchenleitung sorgte dafür, dass die Täter davonkamen, unter gütiger Mithilfe von Behörden, Anwälten, Journalisten. „Zeigt mir das System!“ bringt zugleich den Inhalt des Films auf den Punkt: „Spotlight“ führt ein skandalöses Räderwerk der Vertuschung vor Augen, präzise und unerbittlich.

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Assignment Record– Rev. Stephen A. Pohl

KENTUCKY
BishopAccountability.org

Summary of Case: Stephen A. Pohl was ordained a priest of the Archdiocese of Louisville KY in 1985. He assisted at parishes in Fern Creek, Bardstown and Louisville, and he served for a time as the Archdiocesan Vocations Director. Pohl also pastored parishes in Louisville, Bardstown and St. Thomas. In August 2015 a 10-year-old boy told his parents that Pohl had taken pictures of him and other boys, and that it made him “feel weird.” Federal investigators found child pornography on Pohl’s computer, and 200 photos of children from his parish, some of them “inappropriate.” Pohl was arrested in Florida and charged with accessing child pornography. He pled guilty in January 2016. Sentencing was scheduled for March 29, 2016.

Ordained: 1985

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Court to Reconsider Defamation Suit Against Freeport Man

MAINE
Maine Public Radio

Patty Wight reports on a defamation lawsuit against a Freeport man.

A federal judge in Maine will reconsider a case in which a Freeport man was ordered to pay millions of dollars for defaming the owner of a Haitian orphanage.

At issue is whether the court had jurisdiction over the case.

Last July, a jury awarded Michael Geilenfeld — the founder of a Haitian orphanage and an affiliated charity, Hearts with Haiti — a total of $14.5 million in damages. Geilenfeld had brought the defamation lawsuit against Freeport resident Paul Kendrick, an activist who had launched an email campaign against Geilenfeld, accusing him of being a serial pedophile.

Kendrick appealed that decision against him, and this week, an appellate court in Boston ordered the District Court in Maine to reconsider whether the court had jurisdiction over the case.

Kendrick’s attorney David Walker says it doesn’t, because Geilenfeld, although a U.S. citizen, lives in Haiti.

“If it’s determined the court did not have jurisdiction, the court would simply — I believe, and some of this we’ll have to wait and see — I believe the court would then dismiss the case,” Walker says.

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Priest fondles Kriste Mambo schoolgirl

ZIMBABWE
Manica Post

Lovemore Kadzura

A ROMAN Catholic trainee priest stationed at Kriste Mambo High School allegedly fondled a female pupil (17) during a church service at the school last week. The priest has since been arraigned before the courts to answer the embarrassing charges. Tatenda Brandon Masenga (23) who is a novice Carmelite brother at the institution who was represented by Mr Tawanda Garai of Chigadza and Associates is alleged to have contravened Section 67 of the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act, Chapter 9:23, which criminalises indecent assault.

Masenga was not asked to plead when he appeared before provincial magistrate, Mrs Elizabeth Hanzi, who remanded him to March 11 for trial. Prosecutor, Mr Tafara Chawatama told the court that Masenga who was seating behind the Upper Six student during the service fondled her buttocks with his fingers and toes and only stopped after she changed position.

“On February 10 and at Kriste Mambo High School, the complainant was in a church service when Masenga and fellow brothers entered the church. They sat on the bench behind where the complainant was sitting.

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From the Vatican to Sicily, France, India, Australia and Mexico – A Spotlight Should be on Pope Francis Enabling Clerical Sex Abuse

UNITED STATES
The Open Tabernacle: Here Comes Everybody

Posted on February 18, 2016 by Betty Clermont

In the last two weeks, global events show that Pope Francis is enabling the clerical sex abuse of children by appointing, promoting and refusing to remove bishops with terrible histories of aiding and abetting abuse and by refusing to make meaningful change.

On Feb. 4, clerical sex abuse survivor and member of the pope’s commission on sex abuse, Peter Saunders, arranged for the movie, Spotlight, to be screened for members of the commission. Nominated for an Academy Award for Best Picture, the movie is about the Boston Globe’s Pulitzer Prize-winning investigations into the cover up by Catholic officials of serial pedophile priests.

Two days later, Saunders was booted off the commission. Saunders had been an outspoken critic of Pope Francis’ appointment of a Chilean bishop accused not only of covering up for the most notorious pedophile priest in that country, but also of witnessing the sex abuse. Additionally, Saunders had called the pope’s financial tsar, Cardinal George Pell, “almost sociopathic” for his brutal treatment of victims in Australia.

“On child abuse, I now fear, there is little or no sincerity on his (Francis’) part to effectively make change,” said Saunders, who was abused by two priests as a child. “There needs to be a turning out of all these people who have got very, very grim records – either they are abusers or they are known to have protected abusers or have enabled an abuser or made excuses for abusers.”

Saunders says a call he made for more openness and transparency at a meeting last week was rejected.

“I was shot down in flames,” he said, “The commission said that they need to remain secret and it was surprising how many times that word was used – not ‘confidential’ but ‘secret’ – the word has connotations with abuse because the whole nasty, vile world of the rape and sexual abuse of children exists because it is secret; it happens behind closed doors,” he said.

Eliminating secrecy is exactly what the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (SNAP) has been calling on the Church to do for decades. This is what the pope and his men have refused to do. Catholic officials must open their secret files and make all the hidden documents public. The names of all Church employees with credible accusations of child sex abuse made public. There are still sexual predators assaulting children under the protection of the Church.

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Premier Daniel Andrews says Cardinal Pell should meet with survivors

AUSTRALIA
Armidale Express

By Matthew Dixon
Feb. 19, 2016

VICTORIAN Premier Daniel Andrews has backed moves which would see clergy sex abuse survivors travel to Rome to face Cardinal George Pell as he gives evidence at a Royal Commission hearing.

Mr Andrews said while he accepted Cardinal Pell may be to ill to travel for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, it didn’t stop him from meeting with survivors.

“If Cardinal Pell is too ill to travel then fair enough, I am not going to quibble with that if that is the fact of it,” he said.

“However, let me be very clear about this, Cardinal Pell had ought to make time for anybody who travels to Rome to see him.”

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Melbourne’s Archbishop ‘appalled’ at public criticism of Cardinal Pell

AUSTRALIA
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne

Thursday 18 February 2016
Media and Communications Office

MELBOURNE’S Archbishop Denis Hart has today released the following statement:

I am appalled at the manner in which Cardinal George Pell has been denigrated publicly this week.

Everyone has a right to a fair hearing. It must be remembered that Cardinal Pell offered to appear at this hearing having already appeared before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse twice previously.

He also appeared before the Victorian Parliamentary Inquiry.

It must be remembered that the Royal Commission controls this process, that it accepted that the Cardinal could give his evidence in Rome due to his health concerns and that the community should allow without interference the Commission to determine how the evidence is going to be taken consistent with its normal process.

At the time that the Royal Commission was announced, the Church committed itself to full cooperation. I am conscious of the opportunity that the Royal Commission provides for victims to tell their stories and for the Church to humbly acknowledge its failings and support the victims in their healing.

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PELL SHITS OUT STATEMENT ABOUT “INCORRECT INFORMATION” AFTER MINCHIN DISS

AUSTRALIA
Pedestrian

Cardinal George Pell has hit back at everyone haters who think he’s a lawless, slimy individual wrongfully weaseling his way out of returning to Australia to appear in person before the child sex abuse royal commission on account of a mystery ‘illness’.

A statement from his office said he was most graciously willing to “meet with and listen to victims and express his ongoing support” *after* his testimony in Rome, adding that the past few days had seen a lot of “incorrect information” surface.

That right there would be an indirect ref to Aussie ledge Tim Minchin’s A++ diss track ‘Come Home (Cardinal Pell)’ continues to go viral around the country, racking up more than 400K views on YouTube and helping raised 176K-plus for a GoFundMe campaign to fly Ballarat abuse survivors to Rome to hear Pell testify.

“Cardinal Pell has always helped victims, listened to them and considered himself their ally,” the statement continued. “As an archbishop for almost 20 years he has led from the front to put an end to cover-ups, to protect vulnerable people and to try to bring justice to victims.”

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Archbishop Denis Hart appalled by ‘outrageous’ Tim Minchin song about George Pell

AUSTRALIA
3AW

[with copy of the media release from Bishop Hart]

The Archbishop of Melbourne has labelled Tim Minchin’s song about Cardinal George Pell “outrageous” and over the top.

In the song, Minchin tells Cardinal Pell to “come home” and calls him scum, a buffoon and a coward who had a place in hell.

The Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne hit back in a press release overnight.

Archbishop Denis Hart told Neil Mitchell the song did not represent the Cardinal Pell he knew.

“The language was really over the top,” he said.

“… Such outrageous words, which are not the Cardinal Pell I know, not the man of integrity, not the big strong man who comes across very forcefully and yet who has tried to do a lot in very difficult situations.”

He said Cardinal Pell had been at the “forefront” of trying to do something about claims of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church.

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George Pell controversy: pursuit of Cardinal hindering royal commission

AUSTRALIA
The Australian

JACK THE INSIDER
THE AUSTRALIAN
FEBRUARY 19, 2016

This week, Andrew Bolt wrote a column describing Cardinal George Pell as the victim of a witch hunt. Andrew would know he and I rarely agree but in this case, we are of like mind.

I must say there is one point of disagreement. In his article, he wrote: “It has also asked Pell to give evidence three times — more than any other witness — in what is now becoming a punishment by process.”

This is not right. The Anglican Archbishop of Brisbane, Phillip Aspinall has given evidence to the Royal Commission on four occasions, his most recent stint in the witness box concluding less than a fortnight ago. The Royal Commission is simply doing what it is charged to do.

It is outside the Commission’s jurisdiction where there are grave concerns.

I would argue that it is more of a lynch mob than a witch hunt but ultimately it doesn’t matter what opinions Bolt, myself or anyone else hold for that matter. Tim Minchin wrote and performed a song urging Pell in rather spectacularly obnoxious fashion to return to Australia and give evidence. I understand the anger of victims but I am struggling to see how casual observers like Minchin are contributing anything positive to the issue. Opinion has no place. Establishing facts and building evidence are all that count.

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The Pope, the Australian Cardinal and the tangled Vatican finances

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

February 19, 2016 –

Desmond O’Grady

Merchants in the Temple: Inside Pope Francis’s Secret Battle Against Corruption in the Vatican
​GIANLUIGI NUZZI
HENRY HOLT, $58.95

Preventing further Vatican financial scandals was a key motive in the election of Pope Francis in March 2013.

He appointed a commission, whose acronym was COSEA, to investigate Vatican finance and administration.

Nine months later, after thoroughly irritating Vatican bureaucrats, COSEA wound up its work with a report that identified mistaken investments, contracts for cronies, an ever-mounting debt for Vatican Radio, irregularities in places such as the Vatican supermarket, use of worldwide offerings for the Pope’s charities to cover Vatican shortfalls, excessive charges in saint-making procedures, an ominous future for Vatican pension funds and huge apartments assigned to cardinals. Cardinals have always occupied them but now the contrast with the pope’s two-room digs is striking.

Sections of this report, which were leaked to the Italian journalist Gianluigi Nuzzi, are the main basis for Merchants in the Temple.

Pope Francis’s predecessor, Benedict XVI, had stopped the Vatican being an offshore financial refuge in central Rome by agreeing to stringent international controls to prevent money laundering, but lacked the energy to overcome Curial resistance to reform.

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Paedophile youth worker faces jail after triple rape verdict

UNITED KINGDOM
Premier

Fri 19 Feb 2016

By Aaron James

A former church youth worker and trainee vicar faces jail after being found guilty of three counts of child rape.

Jurors at Woolwich Crown Court also found Timothy Storey, 35, guilty of one assault by penetration.

Timothy Storey, formerly of Peckham Grove in Peckham, south London, was working for the Diocese of London when he began grooming two underage girls for sex via telephone calls, social media and texts.

Mr Storey was previously convicted of grooming girls aged 10 to 16 and encouraging them to perform sexual acts via social media in 2014.

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Former trainee vicar and youth leader facing jail after multiple rape conviction

UNITED KINGDOM
Christian Today

Ruth Gledhill CHRISTIAN TODAY CONTRIBUTING EDITOR 19 February 2016

A former youth leader and trainee vicar who preached a gospel of abstinence is facing many years in jail after being convicted of the rape of two teenage girls. Police are appealing for anyone with more information about the one-time Wycliffe student to come forward.

Timothy Storey, 35, was described in court as “every parent’s worst nightmare”.

He preached the virtues of chastity and abstinence while grooming girls in the congregation at the prominent evangelical church of St Michael’s Chester Square in the heart of London’s exclusive Belgravia disrtrict.

Court News reported that the Oxford theology student began his “incremental, insidious” grooming by sending the girls flattering messages through social media.

One of his victims, who was raped twice, was so under his control she described him as “more influential than God”. Both victims complained to the Church of England about Storey, but the allegations were “brushed aside,” Woolwich Crown Court heard.

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Sex abuse suits are about justice, not publicity

MINNESOTA
St. Cloud Times

Karen Cyson, Times Writers Group February 18, 2016

This is not publicity for an attorney. It’s news reporting. Anderson is an attorney, and his responsibility is not to seek publicity for himself, but justice for victims.

A recent Times letter writer rekindled an oft-heard complaint that St. Paul attorney Jeffery Anderson was getting too much publicity in newspapers.

The majority of the Anderson firm’s work is helping victims of clergy sexual abuse seek justice, and his name is often mentioned in print when he is pursuing a case involving a child who has been raped by a Catholic priest.

Does this constitute publicity? Hardly.

An Associated Press article last week concerning a recent Anderson case, similar to other articles in the past few years regarding Anderson’s advocating for victims, clearly illustrates this.

The report is about 500 words and concerns a priest from India hired by the Diocese of Crookston to serve at a parish in northern Minnesota in 2004. In 2010 he was charged with sexually assaulting two 14-year-old girls. The priest fled the United States and was apprehended by INTEPOL in India, extradited, pleaded guilty to molesting one of the girls. He was sentenced to the year he’d served in jail while awaiting trial, returned to India, and has now been cleared by the Roman Catholic Church to return to parish work.

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Sunbury church abuse survivor heads to Rome

AUSTRALIA
Star Weekly

February 19, 2016

by Matt Crossman

A Sunbury man who was abused as a child by a Ballarat diocese Catholic priest has urged people not to forget the survivors of the horrors that occurred at Salesian College.

Paul Levey said while the spotlight of the ongoing Royal Commission into sex abuse had shone brightly on Ballarat, there was a feeling that Sunbury had been forgotten by some.

‘‘I’ve had guys come up to me and say ‘Paul, what about Sunbury? No-one is talking about Salesian’,’’ he said.

A large number of Salesian College principals, boarding masters and brothers, who were at the college between 1960 and 1990, have faced court on scores of sexual abuse charges.

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Priest held for sexual abuse of boys

INDIA
Times of India

Kochi: Fr John Philipose (38), the manager of Balagram Bala Mandiram run by the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church at Valayanchirangara near Perumbavoor, has been arrested by the Perumbavoor police on charges of sexually abusing the inmates of the children’s home.

A native of Naranganam in Pathanamthitta, Philipose is accused of abusing five boys over two years. There are over 30 children at the home. “The priest has been taken into custody, based on a statement by one of the boys. The abuse came to light when the boys revealed it to their school headmaster,” said Perumbavoor SI Honey K Das.

The school authorities alerted Childline officials, who, in turn, informed police.

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Victoria Police investigating Cardinal Pell

AUSTRALIA
Herald Sun

EXCLUSIVE: A VICTORIA Police taskforce has been investigating allegations of abuse by Cardinal George Pell.

A team of detectives from Sano taskforce has compiled a dossier containing allegations that Pell committed “multiple offences” when he was a priest in Ballarat and when he was Archbishop of Melbourne.

It has been alleged the 74-year-old, who says he is unable to fly to Australia to give evidence to the Royal Commission due to ill health, sexually abused minors by “both grooming and opportunity’’.

Legal sources say detectives have worked for the past year on the investigation which has involved interviewing ‘’numerous’’ alleged victims.

The taskforce has not yet heard from Cardinal Pell or considered his position.

The Herald Sun is not suggesting the Cardinal is guilty, but that there have been allegations made which are being taken seriously enough by police to justify a year-long investigation.

The evidence has been presented to superiors at Victoria Police, they say.

Cardinal Pell has vehemently denied all claims.

STATEMENT FROM THE OFFICE OF CARDINAL GEORGE PELL

Cardinal Pell is due to give evidence to the Royal Commission in just over one week.

The timing of these leaks is clearly designed to do maximum damage to the Cardinal and the Catholic Church and undermines the work of the Royal Commission.

The allegations are without foundation and utterly false.

It is outrageous that these allegations have been brought to the Cardinal’s attention through a media leak. These undetailed allegations have not been raised with the Cardinal by the police and the false claims investigated by Justice Southwell have been ignored by the police for over 15 years, despite the very transparent way they were dealt with by the Cardinal and the Catholic Church.

The Cardinal has called for a public inquiry into the leaking of these spurious claims by elements in the Victorian Police in a manner clearly designed to embarrass the Cardinal, in a case study where the historical failures of the Victorian Police have been the subject of substantial evidence. These types of unfair attacks diminish the work of those good officers of the police who are diligently working to bring justice to victims.

The Phillip Island allegations have been on the public record for nearly 15 years. The Southwell Report which exonerated Cardinal Pell has been in the public domain since 2002.

The Victorian police have taken no steps in all of that time to pursue the false allegations made, however the Cardinal certainly has no objection to them reviewing the materials that led Justice Southwell to exonerate him. The Cardinal is certain that the police will quickly reach the conclusion that the allegations are false.

The Victorian Police have never sought to interview him in relation to any allegations of child sexual abuse and apart from the false allegations investigated by Justice Southwell, the Cardinal knows of no claims or incidents which relate to him.

He strongly denies any wrongdoing. If the police wish to question him he will co-operate, as he has with each and every public inquiry.

In the meantime, the Cardinal understands that several media outlets have received confidential information leaked by someone within the Victorian Police. For elements of the police to publicly attack a witness in the same case study that has exposed serious police inaction and wrongdoing is outrageous and should be seen for what it is.

Given the serious nature of this conduct, the Cardinal has called for a public inquiry to be conducted in relation to the actions of those elements of the Victorian Police who are undermining the Royal Commission’s work. .

The Cardinal calls on the Premier and the Police Minister to immediately investigate the leaking of these baseless allegations.

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Victoria police ‘investigating Cardinal George Pell over abuse claims’

AUSTRALIA
7 News

Cardinal Pell has strongly denied all allegations he ‘sexually abused minors’ during his time as a priest in Ballarat and when he was Archbishop of Melbourne in an explosive new report.

According to the Herald Sun, Victoria police are investigating allegations Cardinal Pell sexually abused minors by “both grooming and opportunity’’.

The Cardinal released a statement on Friday evening stating that the allegations were intentionally damaging.

“The timing of these leaks is clearly designed to do maximum damage to the Cardinal and the Catholic Church and undermines the work of the Royal Commission.

“The allegations are without foundation and utterly false.”

The statement claims the information was leaked through the media in a way to purposefully ’embarrass’ the Cardinal.

“He strongly denies any wrongdoing. If the police wish to question him he will co-operate, as he has with each and every public inquiry.”

The Cardinal is now calling for a public inquiry to be conducted ‘in relation to the actions of those elements of the Victorian Police who are undermining the Royal Commission’s work’.

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Cardinal George Pell ‘under investigation’ over allegations of child abuse

AUSTRALIA
news.com.au

CARDINAL George Pell has vehemently rejected allegations he sexually abused minors, after a Melbourne newspaper reported he has been under investigation.

The Herald Sun claims Victoria Police Sano taskforce has a collection of documents alleging Cardinal Pell committed “multiple offences” while he was a priest in Ballarat and also the Archbishop of Melbourne.

A statement issued from Cardinal Pell’s office states “the allegations are without foundation and utterly false”.

In the statement, the Catholic Church says the timing of the leaks is “clearly designed to do maximum damage to the Cardinal and the Catholic Church and undermine the work of the Royal Commission”.

The claims have not been raised with Cardinal Pell by police, but have instead come to his attention via media reports, it states.

The statement refers to the “Phillip Island allegations” which it says are “outrageous” and “clearly designed to embarrass the Cardinal”, despite being available on public record for nearly 15 years.

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Police ‘investigating allegations Cardinal George Pell sexually abused minors’ – claims he has vehemently denied and described as ‘utterly false’

AUSTRALIA
Daily Mail

By JENNY AWFORD FOR DAILY MAIL AUSTRALIA

Cardinal George Pell is being investigated over claims that he sexually abused and groomed minors, it has been reported.

An explosive Herald Sun report claimed Victoria Police is probing allegations about ‘multiple offences’ committed when the 74-year-old was a priest in Ballarat and Archbishop of Melbourne.
But Cardinal Pell has vehemently denied the allegations, saying they are ‘without foundation and utterly false’, according to a spokesman.

The report said a taskforce is investigating claims that Cardinal Pell sexually abused minors by ‘both grooming and opportunity’.

Detectives have reportedly been working on the investigation, which has involved interviewing ‘numerous’ alleged victims, over the past year.

Victoria Police told Daily Mail Australia they are aware of the report but ‘cannot comment on any cases in which an individual has been named’.

Cardinal Pell is due to give evidence to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sex Abuse in just over one week.

He is currently in Rome and claims he is too ill to fly to front the commission, but will testify via video-link from Rome.

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Cardinal George Pell denies allegations of abuse after reports of Victoria Police investigation

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Cardinal George Pell has vehemently denied allegations of abuse, in a statement issued in the wake of media reports that he is being investigated by Victoria Police.

In response to a Herald Sun report that a Victoria Police taskforce was investigating abuse allegations against him, Australia’s most high-profile Catholic said the allegations were “undetailed” and had not been raised with him.

A statement from the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney also said allegations of abuse that were raised 15 years ago were “without foundation and utterly false”.

Cardinal Pell, 74, is due to give evidence at the child sex abuse royal commission on February 29.

“The timing of these leaks is clearly designed to do maximum damage to the cardinal and the Catholic Church and undermines the work of the royal commission,” the statement read.

Cardinal Pell has called for a public inquiry into the leaking of the abuse claims to the media.

“It is outrageous that these allegations have been brought to the cardinal’s attention through a media leak,” the statement said.

Police said they would not comment on Taskforce SANO’s investigations, which look at historic sexual offending.

“Victoria Police will not provide a running commentary on these investigations as it would be inappropriate to do so,” it said in a statement.

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Police investigate cardinal over sex-abuse claims

AUSTRALIA
New Zealand Herald

Australian cardinal George Pell is being investigated over claims that he sexually abused and groomed minors, it has been reported.

A Herald Sun report claimed Victorian police are looking into allegations about “multiple offences” committed when the 74-year-old was a priest in Ballarat and Archbishop of Melbourne.

But Pell has vehemently denied the allegations, saying they are “without foundation and utterly false”.

The report said a taskforce is investigating claims that the cardinal sexually abused minors by “both grooming and opportunity”.

Detectives have reportedly been working on the investigation, which has involved interviewing “numerous” alleged victims over the past year.

Victorian police told Daily Mail Australia they were aware of the report but “cannot comment on any cases in which an individual has been named”.

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Abuse allegations ‘utterly false’: Pell

AUSTRALIA
SBS

Allegations that Cardinal George Pell molested minors while he was a priest and the Archbishop of Melbourne are “without foundation and utterly false”, the Catholic Church says.

The Herald Sun newspaper on Friday reported that Victoria Police Sano taskforce is investigating the Cardinal for allegedly committing “multiple offences” while he was a priest in Ballarat and also the Archbishop of Melbourne.

Cardinal Pell began work as a priest in Ballarat after being ordained in 1966 and was Archbishop of Melbourne from 1996 to 2001.

In a statement issued from Cardinal Pell’s office on Friday night, the church says it is “outrageous” that the “undetailed” and “utterly false” allegations were brought to the Cardinal’s attention via media leaks.

It calls for those who leaked confidential information to face a public inquiry for trying to “do maximum damage to the Cardinal and the Catholic Church and undermine the work of the Royal Commission”.

The church statement refers to “Phillip Island allegations” which have been on the public record for nearly 15 years.

Cardinal Pell was cleared of allegations he molested a boy at a summer camp on Phillip Island in 1961.

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Cardinal George Pell denies sexual abuse allegations

AUSTRALIA
The Age

February 19, 2016

Liam Mannix
Reporter

Cardinal George Pell has vehemently denied allegations that he sexually abused minors while a priest in Ballarat and as Archbishop of Melbourne.

The Herald Sun’s report on Friday evening claims Cardinal Pell is being investigated by Victoria Police’s Sano taskforce for committing multiple offences, by “both grooming and opportunity”.
The report claims police have spoken to “numerous” alleged victims as part of their year-long investigation.

Victoria Police declined to comment on the report.

In a statement released by the Catholic Archdiocese of Sydney, Cardinal Pell attacked the report and what he claimed was a leak from within Victoria Police which had been timed “to do maximum damage to the Cardinal and the Catholic Church”, and which undermined the work of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

“The allegations are without foundation and utterly false,” the Cardinal’s statement said.

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Spotlight movie review: Mark Ruffalo starrer shines its light on the dark recesses where the truth hid

INDIA
Indian Express

Written by Shalini Langer | New Delhi | Updated: February 19, 2016

“How do you say no to God?” A victim of sexual abuse by a priest tells a team of investigative reporters, trying to explain why what happened happened.

However, God here stands for other things too — the authority, the system, the closed-knit city clique, and what happens when you go up against them.

Spotlight is based on Boston Globe’s Pulitzer Prize-winning months-long investigation into sexual abuse by priests that went on for years with the complicit silence of the Catholic Church. By the end of the film, they have uncovered 70 such priests in Boston itself, and hundreds of victims.

McCarthy, who co-wrote the script with Josh Singer, knows the stark weight of that one sentence, and so attempts no embellishment. The film instead shines its light on the dark recesses where this truth hid.

It’s a gripping portrait of what happens when institutions decide they are bigger than the people who make them. It’s even a line the team of reporters hears, if not in so many words.

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‘Spotlight’ – Sharp and focused

INDIA
The Statesman

Film: Spotlight
Director: Tom McCarthy
Cast: Mark Ruffalo, Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams, Live Schreiber, John Slattery, Brian d’Arcy James, Stanley Tucci, Billy Crudup, Paul Guilfoyle, James Sheridan and Len Cariou
Rating: ****

Based on actual events that occurred in Boston, USA, Spotlight is an intense film that deals with investigative journalism. It is the 2003 Pulitzer Prize winning team’s fight against the system that stirred a hornet’s nest in the locality and the Roman Catholic Church.

The film gets its name from the section of The Boston Globe which specifically deals with exploratory stories. This section is handled by a four-member team headed by editor Walter Robinson, also known as Robby, reporters Michael Rezendes, Matt Carroll and Sacha Pfeiffer.

With the appointment of the new editor Marty Baron in July 2001, the Spotlight team is assigned to investigate allegations against a defrocked priest John Geoghan, who was accused of sexually abusing children in his parish in 1976.

It is during this investigation that the team realises that, torn between faith and knowledge of the crime, the issue is not a one-off case, but a plague that involves about 80 priests. Moreover what was more intriguing is that the people at the helm in the Archdiocese of Boston were aware of the malaise and were systematically brushing the cases under the carpet.

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Paedophilia cold case burns French clergy

FRANCE
euronews

By Valérie Gauriat

A group of former scouts have broken the silence about the abuse they went through decades ago. They want the highest authorities of the French clergy to face up to their responsibilities.

Victims speak out

Bertrand and Pierre Emmanuel had nothing in common. That was until they discovered a few weeks ago that the same memories had marked their childhood behind the walls of the same church in the suburbs of Lyon in east-central France.

“The priest who officiated here abused a lot of children, dozens and dozens in fact,” says Bertrand Virieux, one of the alleged victims

Several of the alleged victims spoke to euronews journalist Valerie Gauriat about the abuse:

“What shocked me the most was when he tried to put his tongue in my mouth. He stroked my genitals, I couldn’t avoid it,” recalls Pierre-Emmanuel Germain-Thill. “I wanted to run away, and at the same time, I didn’t know what to do, I was afraid that if I left that room, nobody would believe me.”

Bertrand Virieux: “I remember the smell of sweat, I remember contact with clothes. I remember his wandering hands under my shirt, which held me tightly against him.”

Didier Burdet: “He used to put his leg behind me to block me and he rubbed against me; I remember that very well, I still have the sensation of his genitals against me. He would say “tell me you love me”. And then he would say ‘you’re my little boy’, ‘it’s our secret, you musn’t tell anyone’+.

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Cardinal Pell hits back at claims he is ‘under investigation’ over child abuse allegations

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Melissa Davey
@MelissaLDavey
Friday 19 February 2016

Cardinal George Pell has strongly denied allegations of involvement in child sexual abuse, saying they are without foundation and utterly false after reports he is being investigated for “multiple offences” while serving in senior positions within the church in Australia.

Police would not comment on Friday night whether they are investigating Pell, who is Australia’s most senior Catholic and the head of the Vatican’s secretariat for the economy, over the allegations.

Pell has called for a public inquiry to be conducted into the Victorian police, saying the allegations were leaked to damage him.

News Corp Australia claims detectives from taskforce Sano have compiled a dossier containing allegations that Pell committed “multiple offences” when he was a priest in Ballarat, a town in the state’s west, and also when he was working with the archbishop of Melbourne.

Police also refused to answer general questions about whether they were investigating claims related to historical child sexual abuse related to the diocese of Ballarat or the archdiocese of Melbourne.

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February 18, 2016

Priest arrested on sodomy charges

INDIA
The Hindu

The Ernakulam rural police have arrested a Christian priest for allegedly sodomising at least five minors of a welfare hostel in Perumbavoor.

The accused has been identified as the 35-year-old John Philipose, a native of Pathanamthitta and manager of the Balagram Balamandir in Valayanchirangara near here. The incident came to light when a 14-year-old inmate explained the incident to his teachers during a counselling session. Following this, the school management approached the Child Line, who, in turn, lodged a police complaint. “Investigations revealed that the accused had been abusing and assaulting the inmates here for the last two years. In addition to boys, he is also suspected to have abused a couple of girl inmates here’’, said Honey K Das, sub-inspector of police.

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Transcript of press conference with Pope Francis

Catholic Philly

The following is an English-language translation of the responses of Pope Francis to news reporters’ questions during the papal flight back to Rome after the conclusion of his apostolic visit to Mexico, Feb. 17. The translation was provided Feb. 18 by Father Thomas Rosica, C.S.B., English language media attaché for the Holy See Press Office.

***

THE CHURCH AND PEDOPHILIA

Pedophilia in Mexico has very dangerous roots, very hurtful. The Maciel case left a strong inheritance, especially in the victims, who still feel unprotected. Some of them are still very religious, some continue priests. Did you at any moment consider meeting with the victims? What do you think about moving priests around when cases of pedophilia are detected?

First of all, a bishop who transfers a priest of a parish when a case of pedophilia is discovered is an unconscious man and the best thing he can do is to present his resignation. Is that clear?

Second, the Maciel case — here I allow myself to name the man who fought in moments when he had no strength to impose himself, until he managed to impose himself: Ratzinger [Applause from journalists]. Cardinal Ratzinger deserves an applause. He’s a man who as the prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith had all the documents, he had everything in his hands, he conducted all the investigations, and went on, went on, went on, until he couldn’t do more in the execution. But if you remember, 10 days before the death of St. John Paul II, in that Via Crucis of Good Friday, he told the whole church that there was a need to clean the dirt of the church, the filth. And in the Mass Pro-Eligendo Pontefice, even knowing that he was a candidate, he didn’t care to make-up [mask] his answer, he said exactly the same.

He was the brave one who helped so many open this door. I want to remember him because sometimes we forget about these hidden works that prepare the bases to uncover the pot.

Third, we’re doing plenty. With the Cardinal Secretary of State [Pietro Parolin], and with the group of nine cardinal advisors, after listening, I decided to name a third secretary adjunct for the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith to take care only of these cases, because the congregation can’t deal with all the cases that come.

Furthermore, an appeals tribunal has been constituted, headed by Monsignor Sicluna. It’s dealing with the cases of second instance where there are appeals. Because the first appeal is dealt with by the ‘feria quarta,’ that meets on Wednesdays. But if there’s an appeal, it goes back to first instance, and that’s not just. The second instance is also a legal matter, with defending lawyers. But we need to work faster, because we’re behind with the cases, because the [appeals] continue to appear.

The commission for the protection of minors is also working very well. It’s not strictly involved [locked] in cases of pedophilia, but [is] in the protection of minors. I spend a whole morning with six of them, two German, two British and two Irish victims of abuse [as minors]. And I also met with victims in Philadelphia. There one morning I had a meeting with the victims. So we’re working. But I thank God because the pot was uncovered, and we have to continue on this path. We need to be aware.

Lastly, I want to say that it’s [abuse is] a monstrosity, because a priest is consecrated to help a child come to God, and he eats him like in an ideological sacrifice, destroying him.

As regards Maciel, the congregation did various interventions and the leadership of the congregation has been restructured, they elected the General and two deputies. As for the councilors, the congregation elects two and the pope choses the other two

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38-year-old Priest Held For Sexual Abuse

INDIA
The New Indian Express

KOCHI: A 38-year-old Christian priest was arrested on charges of sexually harassing an inmate of a child home at Valayanchirangara near Perumbavoor.

The arrested has been identified as John Philipose, a native of Naranganam in Pathanamthitta. He has been serving as manager of the child home run by the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church at Valayanchirangara. According to Perumbavoor sub-inspector Honey K Das, the priest was taken into custody based on the statement given by the victim to Childline officials. According to the police, the incident came to light when the victim revealed the matter to the headmaster of the school where he is studying. Subsequently, the school authorities informed Childline officials. Later, a case was registered under various Sections of the Protection of Children from Sexual Offences Act. The accused was produced before the court, and was remanded.

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EXCLUSIVE: Two women share shocking accounts of forced labor and sexual abuse by prominent Christian leader Bill Gothard

UNITED STATES
New York Daily News

BY LAURA BULT NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Updated: Thursday, February 18, 2016

Two women who are accusing an influential Christian preacher with ties to the Duggar family of sexual assault spoke out for the first time Thursday about their hellish years of forced labor and abuse in the cult-like organization.

Joy Simmons and Jennifer Spurlock are two of the many men and women who have made the horrifying accusations against Bill Gothard, who ran Institute in Basic Life Principles, saying they were deprived of an education, forced to work and were groped by the Christian leader.

“To have your education ripped from you and to have your childhood ripped from you, it’s extremely difficult. It’s just evil,” Spurlock, who spent three years as a minor at one of Gothard’s training centers, told the Daily News.

Gothard retired in 2014 as president from the IBLP after running the organization for 40 years when the sexual assault allegations first came to light.

The women are two of eight new plaintiffs who joined a lawsuit filed in DuPage County Court in Illinois against board members of the IBLP and Gothard, whose influence in the Evangelical Christian world was exemplified by his relationship with conservative politicians — Gothard was photographed with Huckabee at a campaign lunch during his 2008 presidential bid and former Georgia Gov. Sonny Perdue spoke at one of his conferences.

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Pope’s in-flight press conference on return from Mexico + film

Independent Catholic News (UK)

[Watch an edited film of the press conference here: YouTube]

Francis gave a lengthy press conference on the flight back from Mexico to Rome on Thursday, sharing thoughts on many subjects including pedophile priests, abortion, contraception, abortion, Mexico’s ‘disappeared ones’, the Church in Ukraine and the Zika virus.

Asked about immigration and the threats of US presidential candidate Donald Trump to build walls along the southern border, the Pope said he would not comment on the US elections but in added “a person who thinks only of building walls anywhere – rather than building bridges – is not a Christian.” He said he hadn’t heard exactly what Trump had said and would give him the benefit of the doubt.

Asked why he had not met with relatives of the 43 Mexican student teachers who went missing in Guerrero state in 2014, Pope Francis said he had spoken at length about the problems of assassinations by criminal gangs and drug traffickers. He said he was willing to meet with the relatives but there are many groups representing the ‘desaparecidos’ and there are also internal disputes among these groups.

Another Mexican journalist asked about the problem of child abuse and the legacy which Marcial Maciel, founder of the Legionaries, left in the country. Pope Francis said that a bishop who knowingly moves a priest accused of abuse from one parish to another is ‘irresponsible’ and should resign from his post. He also stressed how hard his predecessor Pope Benedict had worked over the past decade to tackle the problem and pointed to the various steps he has taken with his Council of Cardinals, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and the Pontifical Commission for the Protection of Minors.

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Bishops who aid pedophiles must quit: Pope

SBS

AAP

Pope Francis says any bishop who moves a suspected pedophile priest from parish to parish should resign.

Francis spoke about the church’s handling of sex abuse cases while flying home on Wednesday from Mexico, where victims of that country’s most notorious pedophile, the Reverend Marcial Maciel, are still coping with the trauma of his abuse.

“It’s a monstrosity,” Francis said of clerical abuse. “Because a priest is consecrated to bring a child to God. And if he eats him in a diabolical sacrifice, it destroys him.”

The role of bishops in the abuse scandal made headlines again recently after a French priest told a Vatican course for new bishops that they don’t have to report suspected abuse to police. His comments drew a swift correction from Francis’ top adviser, Cardinal Sean O’Malley, who said bishops have an “ethical and moral” obligation to report suspected pedophiles to civil authorities.

“A bishop who changes parish (for a priest) when he detects pederasty is reckless and the best thing he can do is present his resignation,” Francis said. “Clear?”

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STATEMENT OF ERIC MACLEISH & CARMEN DURSO ON THE PROVIDENCE JOURNAL ARTICLE REGARDING THE 1996 WEST VIRGINIA LAW SUIT AGAINST FR. HOWARD W. WHITE ALLEGING CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE IN 1969

RHODE ISLAND
Durso Law

Thanks to the persistent efforts of Providence Journal reporter Karen Ziner, we know have a clear picture – a time-line, in fact – of Fr. Howard W. White’s history of sexual abuse. According to a law suit filed in West Virginia, which Karen Ziner uncovered, White, and the West Virginia Episcopal Diocese, were sued in 1996 by a man who says he was sexually abused, in 1969 when he was 11 years old. The plaintiff alleges the abuse occurred while White was acting as an Episcopal priest, and that the Diocese “systematically and clandestinely suppressed knowledge of [White’s] misconduct.”

In 1974, White was assigned to St. George’s School in Rhode Island. While there, he sexually abused at least two boys, one of whom reported his abuse to Headmaster Tony Zane. According to a letter written by him at that time, Zane sent White away, with money, good wishes and a suggestion to get some help. But Zane did not report him to RI social services, or to law enforcement personnel, despite a legal obligation to do so. Again, thanks to Karen Ziner, and her research, we know that there was a reporting law in effect in RI as early as 1969. Zane did, however, report the removal of White to Episcopal Bishop Seldon, who was assigned to St. George’s. We don’t know what the Bishop did, but we do know that White continued on to several later appointments within the Episcopal Church. None of the dioceses or parishes in which White served were ever told about his dismissal from St George’s because of sexual abuse.

In 1984, while White was assigned to the Grace Church, in Waynesville, NC, he abused a young girl who was a member of the parish. The North Carolina Diocese had to be aware of the 1996 West Virginia law suit, because another Episcopalian diocese was a defendant in the suit. The case resulted in a published opinion of the West Virginia Supreme Court, a document which is available nationally, and in that case the church was represented by a New York law firm. However, White continued to serve in the Grace Church parish until 2006. No one in that Diocese or parish ever took any steps to determine whether White had victimized anyone while he served there.

It is noteworthy what the church’s attorneys did in the 1996 case. They got the Court to dismiss it on a legal technicality: the statute of limitations. There was no attempt to deal with the merits of the abuse claim, and the church continued to appoint White to Episcopal parishes, regardless of his prior history.

There can be no doubt that Fr. White is a persistent abuser, a sick man who should never have had access to children. But these are the questions which now must be answered by the hierarchy of the Episcopal Church: did they take part in a series of active cover-ups, or were they simply oblivious of their obligations to protect the children within their care. The facts say that there is no third possibility.

FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:

CARMEN DURSO
DURSO LAW
LAW OFFICE OF CARMEN L. DURSO
175 Federal Street, Suite 1425
Boston, MA 02110-2287
Tel: 617-728-9123 – Fax: 617-426-7972
carmen@dursolaw.com
www.dursolaw.com

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Abuse victims keen to meet Pell

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

Ballarat clergy abuse victims hope they can watch Cardinal George Pell as he gives testimony from Rome in the child abuse royal commission.

Cardinal Pell has offered to “meet with and listen to victims and express his ongoing support” after giving evidence at the child abuse royal commission via videolink in Rome.

David Ridsdale, a member of the Ballarat Child Abuse Survivors group that wants to go to Rome to hear the evidence, says a meeting with the cardinal would be pleasant.

But he said he knew no survivor who had labelled any dealing with Cardinal Pell or the Church-instigated Melbourne Response “a positive experience”.

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Pope opens the door to contraception in averting harmful effects of Zika virus

Los Angeles Times

Tracy Wilkinson

After ending a dramatic tour of Mexico, Pope Francis on Thursday seemed to open the door for limited use of artificial contraception, long prohibited by the Roman Catholic Church, to prevent pregnancies at risk from the disastrous, fast-spreading Zika virus.

Speaking to reporters aboard his flight from Mexico’s Ciudad Juarez to Rome, Francis was asked if a “lesser evil” — abortion or contraception — could be permitted to prevent the disease from harming a fetus. Researchers believe Zika may be linked to serious birth defects, such as debilitating under-formation of the brain, and hundreds of cases have been reported in Latin America.

Under no circumstances, Francis said, should abortion be considered a “lesser evil,” and he said the procedure should be avoided at all cost. “It is a crime, [killing] one person to save another,” he said. “That is something that the Mafia does … an absolute evil.”

However, preventing a pregnancy that was in danger of being exposed to Zika might be allowable, he said, but only if it would most certainly prevent a pregnancy at risk.

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“Tolerancia cero”

COPE (Espana)

[The pope said he has zero tolerance for sexual abuse and said bishops who transfer pedophile priests from parish to parish should resign.]

Ante patologías como el abuso sexual de menores por parte de sacerdotes, el Papa ha querido ser muy tajante ante los periodistas en su viaje de vuelta a Roma, tras su visita a México: “Tolerancia cero”.

«Un obispo que cambia a un sacerdote abusador de parroquia es un insensato, y lo mejor que puede hacer es presentar la renuncia. ¿Está claro?”, preguntaba el Papa a los periodistas. El Papa ha querido acordarse del cardenal Ratzinger cuando le han preguntado. “Fue valiente para abrir esta puerta. Preparó los cimientos para destapar la olla”, ha relatado. “Si ustedes se acuerdan, diez días antes de morir Juan Pablo II, aquel Vía Crucis del Viernes Santo le dijo a toda la Iglesia que había que limpiar las porquerías de la Iglesia”, añadía el Papa.

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Extended rape statute of limitation approved by state House

COLORADO
The Eagle

DENVER (AP) — A bill to double Colorado’s statute of limitations on sexual assaults from 10 years to 20 years has won initial approval in the state House.

One more vote sends the bill to the Senate.

Two Colorado women who claim Bill Cosby assaulted them decades ago testified recently that the bill would empower traumatized victims by giving them more time to come forward.

The House rejected an attempt by Democratic sponsor Rep. Rhonda Fields to add auxiliary crimes to the extension, such as a robbery that might accompany an assault. The House did not reject the idea, but members decided the idea was too broad for a short floor debate.

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Pope Francis says contraception may be justified amid Zika virus

The Australian

FRANCIS X. ROCCA
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
FEBRUARY 19, 2016

Pope Francis said the use of contraception could be justified in regions hit by the Zika virus, a stance that could reignite a debate over the church’s prohibition of the use of condoms to stop the spread of the AIDS virus.

The Pope also criticised Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump as “not Christian” for his immigration stance, and broke with his predecessors by suggesting that Catholic politicians are free to vote for same-sex marriage and civil unions.

The pope spoke during an overnight flight Wednesday back to Rome following an intense, six-day trip to Cuba and Mexico that saw him hold a historic meeting with the head of the Russian Orthodox Church, blast corruption and exploitation of the poor and defend the plight of immigrants.

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Rome–Pope says complicit bishops should resign

UNITED STATES
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

Statement by Barbara Dorris of St. Louis, Outreach Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 503 0003 cell, bdorris@SNAPnetwork.org)

Today, again, Francis says one thing and does the opposite. Bishops who move predator priests should resign, he told reporters. But just days ago, the AP reported that Vatican officials have lifted the suspension of a convicted predator priest. How does Francis reconcile his words and deeds? How can he justify such recklessness and callousness?

[Pioneer Press]
[Catholic Philly]
[Los Angeles Times]

Last year, Fr. Joseph Jeyapaul pled guilty to sexually abusing a Minnesota girl. This year, the Vatican has given him the green light to go back to work. In fact, the lifting of his suspension, through the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, secretly began months ago.

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More former followers of DuPage ministry allege abuse, harassment

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

Christy Gutowski
Chicago Tribune

More former followers of the DuPage County-based Institute in Basic Life Principles have joined a lawsuit alleging leaders of the conservative Christian ministry conspired to cover up decades of sexual abuse and other acts of harassment.

Sixteen women and two men in an amended 213-page complaint, filed late Wednesday, allege they were victims of sexual abuse, harassment or other inappropriate conduct while they were either participants, interns or employees of the institute several years ago.

Besides monetary damages, they have asked a DuPage County judge to bar IBLP leaders from alleged plans to liquidate resources estimated at more than $100 million while they close the institute’s headquarters near Oak Brook and relocate to Texas, the lawsuit states.

In October, five women sued the institute and its board of directors. An amended suit with five more accusers filed in January dropped the individual directors as defendants but added the institute’s controversial founder and former president, Bill Gothard.

In the latest filing, Gothard is accused by three women of molestation, while other plaintiffs allege he and IBLP officials conspired to conceal various acts of wrongful conduct involving others instead of reporting it to police and state child welfare officials, according to the litigation.

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More women sue home-schooling guru for sexual harassment

ILLINOIS
Religion News Service

Lauren Markoe | February 18, 2016

(RNS) The sexual harassment lawsuit against Bill Gothard, whose ministry preached the subordination of women to men, has grown again.

Now 18 people — 16 women and two men — are suing the 81-year-old founder of the Institute in Basic Life Principles, and the Oak Brook, Ill.-based institute itself, a once influential Christian ministry associated with the Duggar family from TLC’s “19 Kids and Counting.” Thousands of conservative Christian families have relied on the IBLP’s home schooling curriculum.

“It’s very similar to the Bill Cosby situation,” said the plaintiffs’ lawyer, David Gibbs, referring to the sexual assault lawsuit against the comedian. “More and more victims keep coming forward telling the same story.”

The story told in the pleading filed Wednesday (Feb. 17) paints Gothard and other IBLP leaders as manipulative spiritual authorities, groping girls as young as 13 and persuading them to keep the abuse from their parents. The suit also alleges that Gothard raped one young woman. One of the men suing alleges harsh physical punishment and emotional abuse from IBLP leaders. The other alleges that he was molested by a male IBLP counselor, who is not Gothard.

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Pope on sex abuse by clerics: ‘It’s a monstrosity

Spokesman-Review

By Nicole Winfield
Associated Press

ABOARD THE PAPAL PLANE – Pope Francis says any bishop who moves a suspected pedophile priest from parish to parish should resign.

Francis spoke about the church’s handling of sex abuse cases while flying home Wednesday from Mexico, where victims of that country’s most notorious pedophile, the Rev. Marcial Maciel, are still coping with the trauma of his abuse.

“It’s a monstrosity,” Francis said of clerical abuse. “Because a priest is consecrated to bring a child to God. And if he eats him in a diabolical sacrifice, it destroys him.”

The role of bishops in the abuse scandal made headlines again recently after a French priest told a Vatican course for new bishops that they don’t have to report suspected abuse to police. His comments drew a swift correction from Francis’ top adviser, Cardinal Sean O’Malley, who said bishops have an “ethical and moral” obligation to report suspected pedophiles to civil authorities.

“A bishop who changes parish (for a priest) when he detects pederasty is reckless and the best thing he can do is present his resignation,” Francis said. “Clear?”

Francis also reaffirmed the Vatican’s oversight of Maciel’s Legion of Christ, saying it is continuing to help the scandal-plagued religious order reform and praising his predecessor for bringing the truth of Maciel’s misdeeds to light.

Maciel founded the Legion in Mexico in the 1940s, and it became one of the wealthiest and fastest-growing orders in the world. It is, however, emblematic of the Mexican church that Francis so acutely criticized during his trip, with close ties to Mexico’s rich and powerful who by and large send their children to Legion-run schools.

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In RI, One Law For Reporting Child Abuse, Two Different Interpretations

RHODE ISLAND
Rhose Island Public Radio

By ELISABETH HARRISON & CHUCK HINMAN

In the aftermath of allegations of past sexual abuse of students by employees at St. George’s School in Middletown, the school has been accused of violating Rhode Island’s duty to report law for abused and neglected children.

But, as Rhode Island Public Radio’s Elisabeth Harrison first reported, this law is not as clear as it appears to be.

Harrison joins host Chuck Hinman for an update on the situation, and a look at the reporting law in Massachusetts.

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NJ–Victims want arrested cleric put in treatment center

NEW JERSEY
Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests

For immediate release: Thursday, Feb. 18, 2016

Statement by David Clohessy of St. Louis, Director of SNAP, the Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests (314 566 9790, 314 645 5915 home, davidgclohessy@gmail.com)

A New Jersey Catholic cleric has been charged with having and watching child porn. We hope that

–anyone who may have seen, suspected or suffered his crimes will call law enforcement immediately,

–students and staff at St. Joseph’s High School in Metuchen – along with Metuchen Bishop Paul Bootkoski – will aggressively see out other victims, witnesses and whistleblowers, and

–the cleric’s supervisors will put him in a remote, secure, independent treatment center so he’ll get therapy and be kept away from kids.

[NJ.com]

Br. John B. Spalding is accused of endangering the welfare of a child and possession and viewing of pornographic material, primarily child pornography. He’ll soon return to Rhode Island, where he’s from. That’s wrong. Hiss Catholic supervisors should insist he live far away in a professionally run facility so kids will be safer. Why let him live among unsuspecting families and vulnerable children?

We urge Rhode Island Bishop Thomas Tobin to object to this move and warn his flock about Br. Spalding. And we hope that anyone who has knowledge or suspicions about Br. Spalding or other abusive clerics – in New Jersey or Rhode Island – will summon the strength to call police and prosecutors so that the innocent can be protected and the wounded can be healed and more clergy sex crimes and cover ups can be stopped.

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Brother who taught at Catholic high school allegedly had child porn

NEW JERSEY
NJ.com

By Sue Epstein | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com
on February 18, 2016

NEW BRUNSWICK — A brother who taught at St. Joseph’s High School in Metuchen surrendered Thursday morning on charges he possessed and viewed child pornography on his computer.

John B. Spalding, 74, surrendered to Superior Court Judge Alberto Rivas in New Brunswick on charges of endangering the welfare of a child and possession and viewing of pornographic material, primarily child pornography.

Spalding’s attorney, William Fetky of New Brunswick, entered not guilty pleas for his client at the brief hearing.

Two men have been arrested and charged with illegally disposing a corpse, the Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Office announced.

Fetky told the judge his client would post his $75,000 bail and then return to his home in Rhode Island, where he comes from.

Middlesex County Assistant Prosecutor Sheree Pitchford said Spaulding is charged with downloading and viewing the material on his computer, which he maintained at the school on June 21, 2015.

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Priest from Aurora accused of sexual abuse back in court

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

Dan Campana
Aurora Beacon-News

The Rev. Alfredo Pedraza Arias, who was previously affiliated with two Aurora-area parishes and accused of sexually abusing two children, made his first formal court appearance Thursday after posting bond.

Arias, 49, who is listed with a High Street address in Aurora, was charged Feb. 10 with two counts of aggravated criminal sexual abuse involving children under the age of 13 between January 2009 and November 2014. Prosecutors allege Arias fondled the children at Sacred Heart Church in Aurora, as well as one of the youth’s homes.

Arias has been free on $50,000 bail since posting bond Feb. 13, two days after authorities arrested him in Rockford on a warrant. As part of his release from jail, Arias is prohibited from having contact with anyone under the age of 18 or the two children referenced in the charges. He also was required to surrender his passport.

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Oxford-educated pastor who preached about abstinence raped two teenage churchgoers after grooming hundreds of children on Facebook

UNITED KINGDOM
Daily Mail

By ANTHONY JOSEPH FOR MAILONLINE

An Oxford-educated pastor who preached about abstinence raped two teenage girls after grooming hundreds of children online.

Timothy Storey, 35, sexually assaulted the churchgoers of St Michael’s Church in Belgravia, London.

The former theology student at Wycliffe Hall began his grooming by sending the girls flattering messages on Facebook.

One of his victims, who was raped twice, was so under his control she described him as ‘more influential than God’.

Both had complained to the Church of England about Storey, but the allegations were ‘brushed aside’, Woolwich Crown Court heard.

Storey claimed the girls had given their consent but today he has been convicted of three rape charges and one count of sexual assault.

The first victim, now 25, met the children’s pastor when she joined the church in 2002.

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Priest who gambled away church’s $300,000 may lose probation over repayment

ILLINOIS
Chicago Tribune

Clifford Ward
Chicago Tribune

The case of a Catholic priest convicted of gambling away $300,000 of parish funds remains in limbo after DuPage County prosecutors Thursday asked for a hearing to revoke his probation.

The Rev. John Regan will face an April 14 hearing on the revocation, which prosecutors said was based on Regan’s failure to completely repay the money he took from St. Walter Parish in Roselle.

The priest appeared in court briefly Thursday before Judge John Kinsella, who had sentenced Regan in 2011 to four years of probation, as well as some jail time and time in the county work-release program. The judge also ordered Regan to work a menial job to begin repaying the money.

The priest has satisfied his probation requirements — his attorney, Jack Donahue, said Thursday that Regan had been “religious” about meeting his obligations — but still owes $272,000 to the Diocese of Joliet.

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Surowsza kara dla księdza z Kalinówki, trafi do więzienia za molestowanie dzieci

POLSKA
Dziennik Schodni

[Survivors in Poland want a more severe punishment for the priest from Kalinówki who will go to prison for child molestation. In October of last year the District Court in Zamosc sentenced the priest to two years imprisonment, suspended for five years probation, 3 thousand. zł fine and banned for life from working with children.]

Trzy lata spędzi w więzieniu Stanisław G., były proboszcz parafii w Kalinówce w powiecie zamojskim. Pracował także jako katecheta w szkole w Sulmicach.

Dwa lata temu do prokuratury zgłosiła się matka 10-letniej dziewczynki, którą ksiądz G. uczył religii i przygotowywał do komunii. Powiedziała, że jej dziecko było przez kapłana molestowane. Kiedy prokuratorzy zaczęli przesłuchiwać innych rodziców okazało się, że jest jeszcze czworo innych poszkodowanych dzieci.

Jednej z dziewczynek ksiądz miał wkładać ręce pod majtki i dotykać pośladków. Innej dotykał piersi. Do molestowania dochodziło zarówno w szkole, jak i w kościele. Wiarygodność dzieci potwierdzili rozmawiający z nimi biegli psychologowie.

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Former priest in Puerto Rico faces new abuse charges

PUERTO RICO
Fox News

February 17, 2016 Associated Press

SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico – Police in Puerto Rico say a former Roman Catholic priest faces new abuse charges.

They said Wednesday that 65-year-old Floyd McCoy is accused of lewd acts involving a 19-year-old man in a case from mid-2014. They did not provide any details except to say he will appear in court March 7.

McCoy already faces similar charges in another case from 2013 and 2014 that allegedly involves an underage boy. Police said he is wearing an ankle monitor as a result of that case.

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Ni las víctimas ni los desaparecidos

MEXICO
Vanguardia

[After seeing the movie Spotlight, Mr. Rodriguez said Mexico has not done enough to expose pedophile priests and said the media rather than investigating abuse reproduces all statements from the church.]

RAÚL RODRÍGUEZ

OPINIÓN Jueves, Febrero 18, 2016

La noche del domingo pasado, ya con el Papa en México y satisfecho con el regaño que propinó a la jerarquía católica y la profundidad de su elocuente oratoria, vi en el cine “Spotligth”, traducida aquí “En primera plana”.

El filme cuenta cómo la unidad de investigación del periódico The Boston Globe, llamada “Spotligth”, documentó las maniobras de la Iglesia Católica de Massachusetts para ocultar y encubrir un sin número de abusos sexuales perpetrados por medio centenar de sacerdotes, un excelente trabajo periodístico con que el Globe ganó el Premio Pulitzer en 2003.

La película me sacudió la cabeza: 1. Por el abandono a que hemos echado los medios mexicanos al riguroso periodismo de investigación y su falta de voluntad o agallas para enfrentar al poder, salvo contadísimas excepciones; y 2. Por el escabroso asunto de la pedofilia de sacerdotes católicos que en México tiene su más vergonzosa expresión en el fundador de los Legionarios de Cristo, Marcial Maciel, escándalo revelado por La Jornada, del que después hicieron eco en televisión Carmen Aristegui y Ciro Gómez Leyva.

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SLP: EL ULTRAJE IMPUNE DE LOS SACERDOTES PEDERASTAS

MEXICO
Sin Embargo

[SLP: Outrage at the impunity of pedophile priests.]

Sometidos en su infancia por el padre Eduardo Córdova y otros religiosos potosinos, aún siguen sufriendo un gran daño emocional; para la iglesia, el de su ex apoderado jurídico es ya un asunto juzgado.

Por Leonardo Vázquez

San Luis Potosí, 9 de febrero (SinEmbargo/ Pulso).– Eran niños y fueron abusados sexualmente por sacerdotes, al día de hoy, siendo adultos hay quienes continúan bajo la amenaza de sus agresores, sin lograr superar el daño emocional que sufrieron, de los responsables ninguno ha sido sentenciado, todos están libres, unos absueltos, otros prófugos.

En abril de 2014 se hizo público el primero de los casos, el que implica a Eduardo Córdova Bautista, expulsado del ministerio católico al mes siguiente por decisión del Vaticano, a lo largo de ese año surgió una serie de casos de pederastia y abuso sexual que en total implicó a seis sacerdotes, todos sin castigo hasta el día de hoy.

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La Iglesia de SLP se excusa de curas pederastas: no tenemos culpa de que estén libres, dice

MEXICO
Sin Embargo

[Mexico City, February 19 – Priego Juan Jesus Rivera, spokesman for the Archdiocese of San Luis Potosi, said that the institution has no guilt that priests accused of abusing minors are fugitives from justice as in the case of Eduardo Cordova and Noé Bautista Trujillo.]

El vocero de la Arquidiócesis de San Luis Potosí dijo que la Procuraduría General de Justicia del Estado (PGJE) es “testigo” de la cooperación de la Arquidiócesis potosina, encabezada por Jesús Carlos Cabrero Romero, porque, aseguró, han brindado las informaciones pertinentes.

Por Ruben Pacheco

Ciudad de México, 19 de febrero (SinEmbargo/Pulso).– Juan Jesús Priego Rivera, vocero de la Arquidiócesis de San Luis Potosí, dijo que esa institución no es culpable de que curas acusados de abusar de menores sean prófugos de la justicia potosina, como es el caso de Eduardo Córdova Bautista y Noé Trujillo.

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Investigación sobre casos de pederastia en SLP no avanza por trabas de la PGJ: víctimas

MEXICO
Busca Noticias

En el caso del religioso Eduardo Córdova, implicado en al menos 100 casos de abuso sexual en San Luis Potosí en 2014, no hay avances, hay trabas por parte de la Iglesia católica, a la que las víctimas acusan de encubrimiento, y de la PGJE por no integrar las averiguaciones.

Por Oliver Guevara

Ciudad de México, 14 de febrero (SinEmbargo/Pulso).- Martín Faz Mora, activista y asesor legal de víctimas de abuso sexual cometido por el religioso católico Eduardo Córdova Bautista, dijo que la Procuraduría General de Justicia de San Luis Potosí (PGJE) no da el debido seguimiento a las denuncias aunque estén ”súper ratificadas” y que incluso “encontramos trabas”.

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Prêtre soupçonné de pédophilie: “Ma fille m’a dit que la confession s’était passée de façon bizarr

FRANCE
BFM TV

[In late January, Father Bernard Peyrat was indicted because he is suspected of at least four sexual assaults on minors but the father of an alleged victims, his daughter, said the church knew about the alleged misconduct for years.]

18/02/2016

TEMOIGNAGES RMC – Fin janvier, le père Bernard Peyrat a été mis en examen car il est soupçonné d’au moins quatre agressions sexuelles perpétrées sur des scouts mineurs au milieu des années 80. Mais depuis le début des années 90 et jusqu’à l’été 2015, il aurait continué à agir selon le témoignage de ce père de famille qui fait part des gestes déplacés qu’a eu le prêtre, en 2003, sur sa fille.

Des années 1970 au début des années 1990, le père Bernard Preynat, septuagénaire originaire de la Loire, a dirigé le groupe de scouts Saint-Luc, à Sainte-Foy-lès-Lyon, dans la banlieue ouest de Lyon. Depuis la fin janvier, ce prêtre est mis en examen pour quatre agressions sexuelles perpétrées sur des ex-membres de ce groupe indépendant à l’époque et affilié depuis aux scouts d’Europe. Il a également été placé sous le statut de témoin assisté pour trois autres agressions qu’il a reconnu pendant sa garde à vue. Mais depuis le début des années 90 et jusqu’à l’été 2015, le père Preynat a continué d’exercer, près de Roanne dans la Loire, au contact d’enfants.

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Meldungen über Vorwürfe sexuellen Missbrauchs und sexueller Übergriffe

DEUTSCHLAND
Erzbistum Berlin

[Until December 31, 2015 the Berlin archdiocese reported 49 allegations of sexual abuse or sexual assault on minors and adults by clerics. Eight new allegations were made in 2015. The allegations date back to 1947.]

18. Februar 2016 Stefan Förner Pressesprecher

Meldungen über Vorwürfe sexuellen Missbrauchs und sexueller Übergriffe an Minderjährigen und erwachsenen Schutzbefohlenen durch Kleriker, Ordensangehörige oder andere Mitarbeiterinnen und Mitarbeiter im kirchlichen Dienst

Bis zum 31. Dezember 2015 gab es im Erzbistum Berlin 49 Meldungen über Vorwürfe sexuellen Missbrauchs oder sexueller Übergriffe an Minderjährigen und erwachsenen Schutzbefohlenen durch Kleriker, vom Erzbischof beauftragte Ordensangehörige und andere Mitarbeiterinnen und Mitarbeiter im kirchlichen Dienst. Im Jahr 2015 wurden acht neue Vorwürfe erhoben. Insgesamt gehen die Vorwürfe bis auf das Jahr 1947 zurück, die Beschuldigten sind zum Teil verstorben. Seit dem Jahr 2002 werden Verdachtsfälle sexuellen Missbrauchs systematisch erfasst. In diesem Zwischenbericht werden erstmals auch die Vorwürfe sexueller Übergriffe mit gezählt.

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A Woman Trapped In A Priest’s Body

PENNSYLVANIA
Big Trial

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2016

By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

He was a Catholic priest with a secret life, posing on the Internet as “Katie Caponetti,” a teenage girl.

The priest would email a photo of a girl’s naked torso, or a video of a naked girl masturbating, and claim it was “Katie.” Then he would ask the girls he met online to send back naked photos and videos of themselves.

“A predator” who sexually exploited both teenage girls and boys was how Assistant U.S. Attorney Michelle Rotella described Father Mark Haynes in federal court today. “He surrounded himself with children,” the prosecutor said. Throughout his 30-year career as a priest, he used his position to “sexually exploit and sexually abuse children.”

Defense Attorney Alan J. Tauber had a more entertaining explanation. He described the 56-year-old priest as a “woman occupying a man’s body.” According to Tauber, Father Haynes was a troubled soul who, while demonstrating an “extraordinary record of community service” as a priest at eight different parishes in the Archdiocese of Philadelphia, never came to terms with his own “gender identity issues.”

In the end, U.S. District Court Judge R. Barclay Surrick decided that although there was “no question he did a number of good things” as a priest, Father Haynes’s crimes against children were so “outrageous” that his victims would spend “the rest of their lives” trying to recover. So the judge gave the priest a 20 year sentence, a $15,000 fine, and, upon his release, 10 years of supervised probation.

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Former priest reported over historic child sex abuse claims

SCOTLAND
STV

A former priest has been reported to prosecutors over historic child sex abuse allegations.

Father Paul Moore, 80, from Kilmarnock was arrested in December and has now been reported for the procurator fiscal over the claims.

Police are investigating the allegations and prosecutors say they are considering the case. The incidents are alleged to have occurred over more than 20 years from 1975 to 1996

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Retired priest arrested on child sex claims

SCOTLAND
Herald Scotland

Victoria Weldon, Reporter

A retired catholic priest has been arrested in connection with a string of historic child sex abuse allegations.

Father Paul Moore, a former parish priest in Ayrshire, is now facing possible charges of “lewd and libidinous behaviour” towards children, according to police.

The 80-year-old was the priest at the centre of allegations involving children made by a fellow Ayrshire clergyman Patrick Lawson, who was forcibly removed from his post by the church in 2013.

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Commission should be respected: Brandis

AUSTRALIA
9 News

AAP

Attorney-General George Brandis says people should respect a decision by the child abuse royal commission to allow Cardinal George Pell to give evidence by videolink.

Speaking in Washington DC where he is attending the Five Country Ministerial meeting, Senator Brandis said it is not unusual to give evidence by video conference.

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Cardinal George Pell hits back at ‘incorrect information’ on royal commission appearance after Tim Minchin song

AUSTRALIA
ABC News

Cardinal George Pell has hit back at criticism of his inability to return to Australia to appear in person before the child sex abuse royal commission, following a controversial song by comedian Tim Minchin.

Australia’s most high-profile Catholic is prepared to “meet with and listen to victims and express his ongoing support” after his testimony in Rome, a statement from his office said, adding that the past few days had seen a lot of “incorrect information” surface.

“Cardinal Pell has always helped victims, listened to them and considered himself their ally,” the statement said.

“As an archbishop for almost 20 years he has led from the front to put an end to cover-ups, to protect vulnerable people and to try to bring justice to victims.”

Anthony Foster, whose two daughters, Emma and Kate, were raped by their parish priest in suburban Melbourne, said he did speak to Cardinal Pell briefly after his testimony in New South Wales.

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Survivors want evidence not meeting with Pell

AUSTRALIA
Sky News

[with video]

Ballarat clergy abuse victims say they know of no survivors who have come out better from a meeting with Cardinal George Pell.

Cardinal Pell has offered to “meet with and listen to victims and express his ongoing support” after giving evidence at the child abuse royal commission via videolink in Rome.

The statement from the cardinal’s office on Thursday says he has always helped victims, listened to them and considered himself their ally.

David Ridsdale, a member of the Ballarat Child Abuse Survivors group that wants to go to Rome to hear the evidence, says a meeting with the cardinal would be pleasant.

But he said he knew no survivor who had labelled any dealing with Cardinal Pell or the Church-instigated Melbourne Response “a positive experience”.

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Cardinal Says Can Meet Australian Sex Abuse Victims in Rome

AUSTRALIA
New York Times

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESSFEB. 17, 2016

CANBERRA, Australia — Pope Francis’ finance minister said Thursday that he is prepared to meet in Rome with Australian victims of clergy sex abuse who are angry the cardinal won’t travel to Australia to testify at a government inquiry.

Cardinal George Pell, whom the pope placed in charge of the Vatican’s finances in 2014, is to testify for a third time at Australia’s Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

But the inquiry ruled two weeks ago that the 74-year-old cleric could give evidence by video from Rome on Feb. 29 because he was too ill to fly to Australia.

Many victims of sex abuse are angry that Australia’s highest-ranking Roman Catholic will not give evidence in person. Australian musician and comedian Tim Minchin has recorded a hit song in which he insults Pell and urges him to return to Australia.

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EXCLUSIVE: Church victims seek leave to appear with Cardinal Pell in Rome

AUSTRALIA
Independent Australia

Tess Lawrence 18 February 2016,

Lawyers for Catholic Church sex abuse victims are applying to the Royal Commission for leave for their clients to appear with Cardinal Pell in Rome. Contributing editor-at-large Tess Lawrence reports.

NEWS FLASH!

IN A SENSATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, lawyers representing Catholic Church sex abuse victims are applying to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse, seeking leave to appear with Cardinal Pell in Rome.

Independent Australia has learned that Ballarat based Ingrid Irwin, of Irwin & Irwin Law, instructing solicitor for victims Andrew Collins and Stephen Woods and barrister Jim Shaw, of Gordon & Jackson, William Crocket Chambers are two lawyers seeking leave to appear.

Others lawyers are also expected to seek leave.

If leave is granted, it would go some way to mitigate what is publicly perceived to be a judicial and psychological imbalance of power, and unfair concession granted to the domineering Cardinal Pell.

On ill-health grounds Pell controversially sought and was granted the right to give testimony from Rome by video link, and thus has avoided returning to Australia and confronting victims in person in the Royal Commission’s Ballarat sittings.

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Churches dispute edict that priests don’t have to report abuse

CALIFORNIA
Thousand Oaks Acorn

Directive from French monsignor deemed ‘opinion’

By Stephanie Bertholdo
sbertholdo@theacorn.com

News reports claiming that new Vatican guidelines excluding bishops from being liable for reporting clerical child abuse cases to the police are being refuted by the Archdiocese of Los Angeles and by some local churches.

According to recent media reports French monsignor Tony Anatrella told newly appointed bishops that they are not required to report abuse to law officials.

The duty, he said, is the responsibility of the victims and their families. Anatrella’s comments were reported in Catholic news sites and magazines, including Newsweek.

However, not every Catholic district agrees.

Adrian Marquez Alarcon, director of media relations for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles, said the Archdiocese “has a zero tolerance policy and reports incidents of abuse, whether by clergy, staff, volunteers or others to law enforcement and collaborates actively with law enforcement agencies to investigate and prosecute abuse.”

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George Pell responds to calls for him to come home

AUSTRALIA
The New Daily

Feb 18, 2016

ANTHONY COLANGELO Reporter

Controversial Vatican finance chief Cardinal George Pell has responded to criticism of his refusal to face a child abuse royal commission in person.

The commission recently granted Cardinal Pell’s request, via his lawyers, to give evidence from Rome by video link on health grounds, dismaying victim advocates.

“It is ultimately a matter for the Royal Commission to determine the precise arrangements for the provision of evidence by the Cardinal in Rome,” Cardinal Pell’s office said in a statement on Thursday.

Cardinal Pell also indicated he would be prepared to “meet with and listen to victims and express his ongoing support” after giving testimony in Rome.

The statement explained he had appeared twice before the royal commission and once before a Victorian Parliamentary Enquiry previously.

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Cardinal Pell says he will meet sex abuse victims

AUSTRALIA
The Morning Bulletin

Sherele Moody | 18th Feb 2016

CLERGY sex abuse victims have responded to Cardinal George Pell’s decision to “meet with and listen to” them.

The controversial Australian Catholic leader’s office released a statement early on Thursday following wide-spread anger over his refusal to return home to face victims of paedophile priests like the notorious Gerald Francis Ridsdale.

The statement also follows the release on Tuesday of comedian Tim Minchen’s parody song urging Cardinal Pell to appear in person at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse later this month.

The song, Come Home (Cardinal Pell), is sitting at number one on the iTunes music chart.

“The past few days has seen a great deal of incorrect information relating to Cardinal George Pell and his upcoming royal commission appearance,” the statement from the cardinal’s office reads.

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Abuse survivors welcome offer to meet George Pell, but still want to see hearing

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Melissa Davey
@MelissaLDavey
Wednesday 17 February 2016

Survivors of child sexual abuse have welcomed news that Australia’s most senior Catholic, Cardinal George Pell, will meet them in Rome, but say their priority is still seeing him give evidence before a royal commission.

David Ridsdale, who is the nephew and victim of notorious paedophile priest Gerald Francis Ridsdale, is one of those co-ordinating a group of child sex abuse survivors and their supporters to fly to Rome following the success of a fundraising campaign which has raised more than $170,000.

But Ridsdale said the purpose of flying there was to watch Pell give evidence before Australia’s royal commission into institutional responses into child sexual abuse, not to have a separate, private meeting with him.

“We will happily meet with him,” Ridsdale said.

“But this will be a very gruelling, triggering trip for everyone. We are putting ourselves through that to be in the same room as him and to see him be part of the royal commission’s process, which we have all been involved with. We can always meet him at a later date, but for me, there is little point going to Rome if we can’t see him give evidence, and that’s our priority.”

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Spotlight on dark past

AUSTRALIA
The Courier

By Melissa Cunningham
Feb. 18, 2016

St Patrick’s College principal John Crowley has shed many silent tears for past students at previous Royal Commission hearings into child sexual abuse.

They were tears for boys who were let down by a systematic failure of children in Ballarat which spanned decades.

Mr Crowley is bracing for another difficult week with the distressing history of the school set to be put under the spotlight again. A hearing into allegations of sexual abuse concerning the Christian Brothers begins at the Ballarat Magistrates Court on Monday.

Mr Crowley said for many survivors of sexual abuse, the Royal Commission hearings were an extremely difficult time. He said the school’s number one priority was to support and listen to victims.

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Former priest sentenced to 20 years in prison for child sexual abuse

PENNSYLVANIA
The Intelligencer

By Christian Menno, staff writer

A former priest with ties to Bucks and Montgomery counties was sentenced in federal court Wednesday to 20 years in prison for child sexual abuse and exploitation.

Mark Haynes, 56, of West Chester, pleaded guilty June 8 to a variety of charges including using the internet to entice a minor to engage in sexual conduct, transferring of obscene material to a minor and distribution and possession of child pornography.

Haynes was ordained in 1985 and served in a number of area pastoral assignments including Our Lady of Mount Carmel in Doylestown (1989-1991), Archbishop Wood High School in Warminster (1990-1991), Saint John of the Cross in Roslyn (1991-1994) and Our Lady of Good Counsel in Upper Southampton (1994-2000), according to the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

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Ex-chaplain in St. George’s School scandal sued 20 years ago in West Virginia

RHODE ISLAND/WEST VIRGINIA
Providence Journal

By Karen Lee Ziner
Journal Staff Writer Posted Feb. 17, 2016

An Episcopal priest embroiled in a sex-abuse scandal at the elite St. George’s School in Middletown was sued 20 years ago by a West Virginia man who said the Rev. Howard W. White Jr. sexually molested him when he was approximately 11 years old.

The suit also asserts that The Protestant Episcopal Church in the Diocese of West Virginia (“the Diocese”) “conspired” to cover up White’s alleged misconduct to avoid “public knowledge, criminal prosecution, disgrace and scandal.”

In his 1996 complaint, Richard Albright stated that the Diocese “knew, or should have known” of White’s “alleged proclivity for deviant sexual behavior, but failed to alert its parishioners of the potential danger to their children,” and was vicariously liable for White’s actions.

Instead, the Diocese kept appointing White to various assignments “within the Diocese of West Virginia and elsewhere, without reporting the criminal sexual misconduct to law enforcement authorities.” White, the suit alleged, “is and was unfit” to be a priest, and “is and was a severe danger to persons who were his potential prey.”
The Journal located the documents this week.

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In ‘The Club,’ lines are blurred at a seaside retreat for fallen priests

UNITED STATES
Boston Globe

By Peter Keough GLOBE CORRESPONDENT FEBRUARY 18, 2016

“The Club,” Chilean director Pablo Larraín’s oblique allegory about clerical criminality in the Roman Catholic Church, begins with a familiar quote from Genesis 1:4: “God saw that the light was good and he separated the light from the darkness.” Enigmatic, atmospheric, and seductive, the film unfortunately sheds little light on subjects that have too long been hidden in the dark.

The title refers to a group of four priests in a house overlooking the ocean in a Chilean village. At certain angles, the house looks like it belongs on a horror movie poster. Adding to the unwholesome atmosphere, each priest has the disreputable look of a bishop in Luis Buñuel films. As it turns out, each represents a different vice, of which the sexual abuse of minors is only the most obvious. And then there’s Sister Mónica (Antonia Zegers), the creepiest nun on screen since Vanessa Redgrave in “The Devils” (1971), who oversees the inmates and does housework.

Accustomed to isolation, the seedy group unexpectedly receives three visitors in as many days. The first, a new resident, doesn’t hang around very long. The second is a bearded young tramp who calls himself Sandokan (Roberto Farías); he stands outside their door and shouts obscene and terrible accusations. And the third, Father Garcia (Marcelo Alonso), comes from the Church hierarchy with an assignment to investigate the retreat and the clerics who live there.

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Vatican finance boss George Pell taunted over ‘cowardice’

AUSTRALIA
BBC News

A provocative song and a public drive to raise funds to send child sex abuse victims to the Vatican have sparked fresh controversy around Australia’s most senior Catholic, writes Trevor Marshallsea.

In 2014, Cardinal George Pell, the Archbishop of Sydney, was summoned to Rome to become chief of the Vatican’s finances, a new position created by Pope Francis in the wake of scandals at the Vatican Bank.

But Cardinal Pell left another scandal behind him, and the anger over widespread sexual abuse of children by members of the Catholic clergy continues to rage in Australia.

The cardinal was once again under fire this week over his refusal, on medical grounds, to return home to front the Royal Commission which is investigating how various institutions responded to the child abuse allegations.

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Alleged Abuse Victim Opens Up About Ex-Priest Daniel McCormack, Lawsuit Against Archdiocese

CHICAGO (IL)
CBS Chicago

[with video]

By Dana Kozlov

(CBS) — Confusion, anger and depression. One Chicago man battled all of these emotions for more than ten years before he finally told someone he had been molested by former Catholic priest, Daniel McCormack.

The man, who we are not identifying, speaks out for the first time about the abuse and his lawsuit against McCormack and the Archdiocese of Chicago

“I figured it was time to get some help to tell my dark secret,” he said.

The young man, who we’ll call John Doe, isn’t ready to reveal his identity. He still struggles to talk about what happened inside Saint Agatha’s School on Chicago’s West Side, when he was alone with former priest, Daniel McCormack.

“Hey, I thought this guy, he was okay, so I kind of stuck to him like glue,” he said.

John says he trusted McCormack, and “It ended up turning into sexual abuse.”

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Film Review: Spotlight

INDIA
Live Mint

Uday Bhatia

There are many great films about journalists, but only a few excellent ones about journalism. It’s easy to see why: journalists, those deadline-battling, chain-smoking mythical beings, make for naturally exciting cinema. But the actual stuff of journalism —the late nights and false starts, the endless cups of coffee, the decidedly unglamorous pursuit of a source for a quote—is tougher to weld into movie magic.

Tom McCarthy’s Spotlight is that rare film that is first and foremost about journalism.

Methodically but stirringly, it tells us of the time in 2001 when the Boston Globe —more precisely, the investigative “Spotlight” team of Michael Rezendes (Mark Ruffalo), Walter Robinson (Michael Keaton), Sacha Pfeiffer (Rachel McAdams) and Matt Carroll (Brian d’Arcy James)—stumbled upon, investigated and reported a story on the Boston Catholic Church shielding priests guilty of sexual abuse. It’s a film about the many things, big and small, mundane and pivotal, that go into reporting something of this magnitude. (Note that McCarthy played a journalist in the last season of The Wire, another forensic look at a newspaper office.)

We see the story’s genesis in a staff meeting, with the paper’s newly appointed editor, Marty Baron (Liev Schreiber), bringing up a column about a lawyer named Mitchell Garabedian (Stanley Tucci) who claims to have proof that the Archbishop of Boston knew of a particular priest who’d molested children but had done nothing about it. Baron asks Robinson, head of Spotlight, to follow up. The team speaks to Garabedian, then to some of the victims and church officials. As they continue to dig, they realize the cover-up is on a much larger scale than they or anyone else had imagined.

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‘Donovan’ Takes on Abuse Better Than ‘Spotlight’

UNITED STATES
PopZette

by Lawrence Meyers

A man exits prison, and his first stop is the apartment of a priest, whom he shoots in the head, splattering blood everywhere. Across the country, the man’s eldest son works as a “fixer,” operating beyond the boundaries of the law, beating stalkers with a baseball bat and cheating on his wife with a girl half his age. One of his brothers is an alcoholic and sexual anorexic, with the mind of a 12-year-old.

Welcome to the family of “Ray Donovan,” Showtime’s series about a Hollywood “fixer,” but whose subtext is about the long-ranging and devastating effects of sexual abuse at the hands of a priest. Every storyline is informed by the Donovan family’s grim past and, as such, elevates the drama and the societal issue far above the superficial treatment the same issue receives in the Oscar-nominated “Spotlight.”

“Spotlight” is a good film, with a solid script, and workmanlike performances from all involved. Yet it lacks any real exploration of the psychological and physical damage suffered by those who endured the abuse. The audience is provided a few scenes with victims, yet they are little more than generic stand-ins that exist more to push the plot forward than to provide any context or detail about life after abuse.

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‘Spotlight’ – Sharp and focused ( Rating: ****)

INDIA
New Kerala

Film: “Spotlight”; Director: Tom McCarthy; Cast: Mark Ruffalo, Michael Keaton, Rachel McAdams, Live Schreiber, John Slattery, Brian d’Arcy James, Stanley Tucci, Billy Crudup, Paul Guilfoyle, James Sheridan and Len Cariou; Rating: ****

Based on actual events that occurred in Boston, USA, “Spotlight” is an intense film that deals with investigative journalism. It is the 2003 Pulitzer Prize winning team’s fight against the system that stirred a hornet’s nest in the locality and the Roman Catholic Church.

The film gets its name from the section of The Boston Globe which specifically deals with exploratory stories. This section is handled by a four-member team headed by editor Walter Robinson, also known as Robby, reporters Michael Rezendes, Matt Carroll and Sacha Pfeiffer.

With the appointment of the new editor Marty Baron in July 2001, the Spotlight team is assigned to investigate allegations against a defrocked priest John Geoghan, who was accused of sexually abusing children in his parish in 1976.

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Pope adviser Pell ready to meet Australia abuse victims

ROME/AUSTRALIA
Global Post

Agence France-Presse
Feb 17, 2016

Vatican finance chief George Pell Thursday said he was ready to meet with child sex abuse victims after an outcry over his decision not to appear in person at an Australian inquiry.

Pell, an Australian, was due at the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in the town of Ballarat, northwest of Melbourne, later this month but will give evidence via video-link from Rome instead, citing illness.

He has always denied knowing of any child abuse occurring in Ballarat, where he was once based, including by paedophile priest Gerald Ridsdale, who abused dozens of children over two decades.
The former Archbishop of Sydney’s decision to testify remotely sparked a crowdfunding campaign this week to send 15 victims to Rome to witness him giving evidence.

It has so far raised more than Aus$176,000 (US$126,000), easily surpassing the original Aus$55,000 target.

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February 17, 2016

Cardinal George Pell responds to calls for him to come home

AUSTRALIA
Sydney Morning Herald

February 18, 2016

Marissa Calligeros
Online reporter

Cardinal George Pell has responded to attacks on his refusal to travel to Australia to face the child abuse royal commission in person, including a provocative song penned by comedian Tim Minchin.

In a strongly-worded statement, Cardinal Pell said he considered himself an ally of abuse victims and was willing to meet with them, listen to them, and express his ongoing support.

“The past few days has seen a great deal of incorrect information relating to Cardinal George Pell and his upcoming royal commission appearance,” Cardinal Pell’s office said in a statement on Thursday.

“The Cardinal is anxious to present the facts without further delays.

“Cardinal Pell has always helped victims, listened to them and considered himself their ally. As an archbishop for almost 20 years, he has led from the front to put an end to cover ups, to protect vulnerable people and to try to bring justice to victims.”

The Cardinal has claimed he is too ill to travel to Australia to give evidence to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

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Cardinal George Pell Prepared To Meet With Sex Abuse Survivors In Rome

AUSTRALIA/ROME
Huffington Post

By Eoin Blackwell

Cardinal George Pell is willing to meet with abuse survivors in Rome, following a crowdfunding campaign to send representatives to hear his testimony before the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse.

Survivors of abuse at Catholic institutions in Ballarat are hoping to attend the hearings in person, following a crowd funding campaign that raised more than $170,000 in three days, surpassing its aim of $55,000 on its first day.

Pell is expected to give evidence as part of the Commission’s inquires into how the Catholic Archdiocese of Melbourne and Catholic Church authorities in Ballarat responded to wide-spread abuse, and in early February it accepted medical evidence a long-haul flight posed risks to the Cardinal’s health.

“Cardinal Pell has always helped victims, listened to them and considered himself their ally,” Pell’s statement said.

“As an archbishop for almost 20 years he has led from the front to put an end to coverups, top protect vulnerable people and to try and bring justice to victims.

“As Cardinal Pell has done after earlier hearings, he is prepared to meet with and listen to victims and express his ongoing support.”

He said he was anxious to present all the facts without delay, and will cooperate with “whatever arrangements the Royal Commission determines”.

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Tim Minchin’s scathing song calls on George Pell to ‘come home’ to face abuse inquiry – video

AUSTRALIA
The Guardian

Comedian and singer-songwriter Tim Minchin has released a single, Come Home (Cardinal Pell), calling on George Pell to return to Australia to give evidence to the royal commission into institutional responses to child sexual abuse. In the song, which has been viewed hundreds of thousand of times, Minchin labels Australia’s most senior Catholic a ‘coward’ and a ‘pompous buffoon’. All proceeds from the song will go towards a campaign raising money to send child sexual abuse survivors and their supporters to Rome to see Pell give evidence via videolink on 29 February

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Predator priest sentenced to 20 years in prison

PENNSYLVANIA
Philly.com

by Jeremy Roebuck, STAFF WRITER.

By the time he was in high school, Mark Haynes felt called to devote his life to the Catholic priesthood.

But from a much earlier age, his lawyer said Wednesday, Haynes realized something else that set him apart – an unshakable feeling that by some accident of genetics he had been born a woman stuck in the body of a man.

Haynes’ therapist would later conclude the dissonance between his vocation and the condition he came to view as an affliction led him to an addiction to child pornography and a series of predatory sexual encounters with children that have now landed 56-year-old suspended prelate in prison.

But federal prosecutors balked at that explanation Wednesday as Haynes, most recently of SS. Simon and Jude Parish in Westtown, was sentenced to 20 years incarceration in a case as notable for the charges he will never face as those to which he pleaded guilty last year.

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Cardinal George Pell hits back at ‘incorrect information’ after uproar over his decision to stay in Rome for royal commission

AUSTRALIA
9 News

By Tyron Butson

Australian Cardinal George Pell has hit back at his detractors, saying there has been a “great deal of incorrect information” peddled following his successful bid to remain in Rome during a royal commission in to child abuse.

The 74-year-old clergyman will appear via a video link from Rome after the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse accepted a doctor’s report stating he would risk serious heart complications if he flew to Australia to testify in person.

The commission will question Cardinal Pell over his knowledge of sexual abuse by priests in the Victorian Catholic diocese of Ballarat. He served as a priest in the diocese before becoming a Bishop in Melbourne.

But the Cardinal’s decision not to return to Australia has triggered the ire of abuse victims and the public.

Performer Tim Minchin even penned a scathing song, labelling the clergyman a “coward” and “scum” for not facing victims face to face. …

But Cardinal Pell’s office today released a statement saying he had “always helped victims, listened to them and considered himself their ally”.

“The past few days has seen a great deal of incorrect information relating to Cardinal George Pell and his upcoming Royal Commission appearance,” the statement read.

“As an archbishop for almost twenty years he has led from the front to put an end to cover ups, to protect vulnerable people and to try to bring justice to victims.”

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